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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-04-17 - Orange Coast Pilot• p HIQH71 lUESDAY, APRIL 17 . 1984 • Coa•t Attorney General Van de Camp talks about chlld abuse and Neighborhood Watch In Costa Mesa./ A3 Biii Harvey says he just can't wait to see what the mailman brings him every day.JAi Callfomla A proposed book on killer Christopher Wiider has angered the father of one of his victims./ AS The shuttle spacecraft Challenger takes off pig- gyback from Edwards AFB .JM Natl on Study shows a full moon does make some people a bit loony .I AS Announcement of Pulitzer Prize winners leaves some winning wordsmlths speechless. /AS World Gunman Inside Libyan Embassy In London kills policewoman and Injures 11./M' Mind and Body Legions of well-dressed non-exerclaers get a shot In thearm./81 Living past 100 take a bit of deprivation and a lot of oash./81 Sports Woodbridge Hlgh's baseball team enjoyed a record-breaking day In Easter holiday tour- nament actlon./C1 The Minnesota Twins roughed up Angel rookie Ron Romanick In a 9-2 victory. /C1 Golden West College's women's basketball team advanced In Its own tour- nament after scheduled opponent Citrus didn't show for the game./C2 Entertainment Those beck lot tours at Universal Studios have been going on tor 70 years./83 Buelneu Alan Greenspan says solution to deficit wlll determine future econ- omic health of U.S./85 ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·:·:·:·: INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Buatnea Callfomla News Clalllfled Comlct Crouword Oeath Notices Help Yourtett Horoecope AnnLandere Mind and Body Mututll Fund• Nettonal Newt OptnJon PoMceLog Pubffc NotlCM Sport• Stodl Marketa TeleYttlon Tl*tert WMthtr WorldN.wt 82 84 A3 85 A4 CM 8• ce C• B2 C7 B2 81-2 B5 A4 AS A3 C4-5 C1_.. C1_.. 82 83 A2 A4 City council expected to approve ordinance to prohibit dJscrimtnatton By DAVID BISHOP Mayor Robert Gentry first n.llr.,..._,., •111 proposed the measure March 14 in Gay ri&}us will be on the agenda in the wake of California Gov. George Laguna Beach tonight as city council • Deukmejian's veto of AB!, a state memben consider a local ordinance assembly bill that would have banned designed to prohibit discrimination discrimination statewide. · based on sexual orientation. Gentry, a homosexual who is a Move over, Goodyear There'll be more than one blimp cralaln• the akle. dariJaar the Sammer Olympl~ ln Loe Aqela. TbJa brand-new alnhlp, dalened and built ln EDfland, toata the 'rirtaa of leadin1 apokaman for llY rtebta iuuea in <>ranee Cowuy. ftail a "back.I.uh .. of resentment and dil. crimination apinst P Y• foUowina the failure of ABI. The proposed o rdinance is limilar to ones currently in effect in the cities of Berkeley, Los Anaeles. San Fran- cisco, San Diego, Santa Barbera and others, according to a report prepared by the city staff, which cited the need for su<'h an nrrlinance "in the ablence or~ sweud federal miniau OD artMtrary dilCrimiDa&ioa billed OD toul oricaeatioa to .... d:ae par-ticular problems ofd:ae aay." The OODUlatiom or 18.000 in Llpna 8mdi ii estimated to be Crom IS to lO percent llY· Oenvy u_ya he knows of cues in whicb 11ys feel they would lose their· ~-their tex.\W orientation were ·The propoeed ordinuce would Fuji Film. It'• currently ander•olnf maintenance at the llarlne Corpe Air S~tton ln TUtln, then It will Oy to Seattle, retarnlnf ID time for the Olymplca ln Jaly. Bby, 3,: killed as dad crash~s Father faces drunk . rap after accident · ·By ANDREA ADELSON °' ............... A 3-year-old boy died today foUow- int a crash Monday eveninc UI lrviM when bis father, believed IO be driving under the influence of al- cohol, slammed bis car into a wuer tank at a construction site, police reported. Larry Wayne Davis, 37, was ar- rested on suspicion of felony drunken drivin' and vehicular manslau&hter followint the 8,.m. accident near the intenec:tJon o Alton Avenue and Toledo Way. Police said the boy, Robert Davis, was rushed to Mission Community Hospital with massive internal in- juries. Despite emergency SUl'JICfY. the younpter was pronounced dead (Pleue .. CaASB/ A2) .Dentist bids for dismissal By JEFF ADLER °' ... ....,,... .... Mobile home park lawsuit in court Costa Mesa dentist Tony Protopappas' defense attorneys asked the court Monday to dismiss the three second-deJree murder charges against their client because of "pros- ccutorial misconduct." The murder trial remamed 1n recess because of the judge's illness By JEFF ADLE R Of ... Dellr ........... The million-dollar lawsuit filed by the tenants of the Treasure Island Mobile Home Park in South Laguna against the park's owners went to court Monday. The Treasure Island Tenants As- sociation sued park owners claiming they had e ngaged in a "pattern of harrassment and intimidation" and had illegally retaliated against park residents, many of whom are elderly, after two earlier lawsuits challenging the conversion of the park to a time-share resort were filed. The lawsuit, which is being tried in two phases in Judge John Flynn Jr.'s Santa Ana courtroom, asks that park owners not only be ordered to reimburse residents for app~oximate- ly $500.000 they were Charged in excessive rents, but also that the owners be assessed $500,000 in punitive damages. The motions for dismissal claim Deputy District Attorney James Oon.inger withheld evidence from the defense and intimidated ·and threatened witnesses. Mesa backs parking enterprise A judge will rule on the legal merits of one Part of the case while a jury will hear and decide the second part. according to Ellen Wintcrbonom. the Irvine attorney representing the ten- ants' association. Winterbottom said she expects to call about 18 witnesses during the ~urse of the estimated week-long \rial. Defense attorneys Robert Tuller and Hollis Dyer also asked the coun to suppress cen.am evidence in the case. particularly the dental chan of K.im And.rf-.asscn. one of Proto~ pas' three alleged victims. If the motions are denied by J udse Luis Cardenas. who is expected to schedule a hearing on the matter later this week, Protopappas' lawyers will ask the court to delay the triaJ another week to give them ume to review the contested material. By KAREN E . KLEIN Of .... n.llr ,.... ..... A controversial Pac ific Amphitheatre parking concession ex- pected to result in a $30,()()().plus windfall for the Newport-Mesa Uni- fied School District was approved by the Costa Mesa City Council Monday over homeowners' protests. The pay parking operation run by the Boosters' Club at Costa Mesa High School should brin$ in at least SI 0,000 for school activities and another $20,000 for the district's activity transportation fund, said Principal Don Champlin. The school 1s directly across Arling- ton Avenue from the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. where the amphitheater is located. About 40 faculty members. stu- dents and parents from the high Btl.llot propositions start wit-h 16in this year's state election When Californians go to the polls June 5. they will be asked 10 render their opinion on nine statewide ballot measures including one that puts a cap on the amount of money the Leaislature may spend on itself. another intended to clean up political campaigns and several that would fund construction of county and state prisons. For the first time, however, voters won't be facina a confusina list of ballot propositions led by Prop- osition l and numbered consecutive- ly thereafter. To avoid the confusion of ballot measures carryina the same desia- nation -such a multiple Prop- osition I 3s. for example -a new state law rcquua that measures be numbered conteCUtively from elec· taon to elec1ion. Therefore, tb1s )'cat's crop of balk>t measures bc&Jns with Propoi1t1on 16. And the numbcnna cycle, established wtth the November 1982 election will continue for the nc•t 20 years. Ballot measures appcarina on the June ballot are: •~ltlOD It, authoriLlna the sale of $250 m1lhon in state scncraJ JEFF ADLER PERSPECTIVE obliption bonds to finance tbe build- ina. remodclina and maintenance of county jatl facilities throuahout the state. The state Board of Corrections reports California's county jails houte 42.100 prisoners in space d~ianed to accomodate 33,000. To correct the ovcrcrowdina problem the board estimates counties wili bave to spend SI. I balhon over the next I 0 yean to expand jails. In November 1982, state voten authon1t!d a $280 mill.Jon bond 1 uc to bealn the statewide J~ e pan ion. .,..,..,..... n. 11m1lar to the procxdina m ure, would authorize a $300 million bond issue to help (Pleue eee BALLOT I A2) school turned out in support of tltc . parking operation. which they say ran smoothly after some initial problems last season. Some homeowners from College Park. a neighborhood across Fair- view Road from the amphitheater which has been bese1ged by noise. traffic and parking from the facility. protested the high school parking on (Pleue eee PARJD1'G/A2) Take five, Jumbo The lawsuit 1s the third of three legal actions challeng.ing park owners and their nght to convert the·mob1le home park to a ttme-share resort, which 1s to feature twin lodges conta1nang 440 units and a 75-unat apartment building on the 27-acre beachfront pared . In two previous lawsuits. the (Pleue eee PARK/ A2) The tnal was halted Apnl 9 after Cloninger tnfo nned Protopappas' de-- fense team his anvesta~tors had uncovered new e vidence 1n the case. Judge Cardenas agreed to delay the (Pleue tee DltNTIST'S/ A2l » .• One of tlM Ctrcaa v..-eleplwata eaJop a reeplte after dae ~ top wu laoUmd Monday for tile allow'• annual ran at dae Oraqe County Pal.rpo1mda lo Coeta .. ... 11ae ....... &Del acrobat atnft• 1aua will .-.OW at l p.a .• 4 :30 p.a. .... p.m. tod&J ~ Tluanda.1. •Ma dli9 clrcu wt1I .°" ap.ln. .. .. t ·AA** ()qnge 00Mt DAtLV PtLOTITU19dar, AptU 17, 1914 John Gabriela "" LB man .facing more misdemeanor counts BJ DA. VID BISHOP .., ....... ,. ,, ~ ~na Beach c1v1c activist John Oabriels will be cbaraed witb ad· ditional misdemeanor counts of an· •. noyi ng and contributing to the delin· quency of minors, police said today. Gabriels, 60, who was an unsuo- ccuful candidate in last Tuesday's city council election, was booked Wednesday on two counts of annoy- ing children and two counts of contributing to the delinque ncy of minors. He was released on SI0,000 bail. Laguna Beach police Lt. Jim White said that more youths have told police investigators of incidents simi- lat to the one that a 16-year..old runaway from Los Anaeles described last woet. whlcb resulted in rour counts be~ flied apinst Gabriela. After beina stopped in Laauna Beach for a traffic vao)ation, the youth wd be and bis female 14-ycar-old companion had been supphed with drup and enpaed in sexual activi ty with Gabriels durina a stay in Gabriela' Laguna Beach home. Lt. White said the several ad- ditional misdemeanor charges arc beinJ prepared and will be filed with the Oranae County district attorney's office this week. Gabriels refused to comment on the advice of his attorney. -li·liill'll*ililMl~--------------- PARKING FOR THEATER APPROVED .•. From Al the grounds that all parking for the 18. 700-scat amphitheater should be at the fairgrounds. The parkins program had been denied by the city's planning staff and Planning Commission last month and was appealed to the city council Monday by Ray Schnierer. business manager for the school district. The city council unanimously ap- proved the parking concession. sa)'- mg that it would not be detnmental to surrounding ho mes and that the school would be willing to accept hab1lity for the parlung lot. Schm erer said district funds would have to be expended to supervise cars· trying to park in the 1.500-car high school lot on concen nights whether or not the pay parking operauon was all owed. "It follows that we shou ld receive benefits of paid parki ng to offset our costs and earn money for the benefit of the Newpon-Mesa Unified School District's instruct ional program," Schnierer said in his appeal. Several of the booster club mem- bers said the amphitheater, which has been a nuisance to homeowners. has been a benefit to the sch ool. "We've fallen into a windfall wnh the amphitheater being built -it's benefitt.ed us JrC3tly," said An ne Kelley, general booster president. "What is a windfall to some is a nightmare to others,·• College Park homeowner Joe Devlin countered. Residents living nea r the amphitheater have asked that all parking be confined to the fair- grounds parking lot. Norb Bartosik. general manager of the fairgrounds, said there is ample pay parking for capa ci t y c ro wd s i n th e amphitheater's lot. But the off-site parking at the high school 1s more convenient fo r some drivers and 1s popular. Principal Champlin said. ··w e make about $200 a night and there are SO or 60 concens scheduled this season." he said. He said the boosters will ~ct roughly 2S percent of the parkrng proceeds. an additional 25 percent will ~o to operating expenses of the parkrng facility and about SO percent will go to the district's transportation fund to benefit all four New- pon-Mesa high schools. "The board (of educatio n) spends between $80.000 and $90,000 a year to transpon kids to athletic and academic activities," Champlin said. With the parking concession off- se tting some of that cost. the board would be able to transfer those funds back into improving instruction. CRASH KILLS 3-YEAR-OLD BOY ... From Al today at I a.m. The father was treated for minor injuries at Saddleback Community Hospital before. being booked at Orange County Jail. . Police. who were still at the accident scene late this morning, said they believe the child was riding on his fa ther's lap and apparentl) was crushed between the steering wheel and his father. who was flung forward in the coll1S1on. "The kad took most of the impact," noted Lt. Sam Allevato. who ~1d the child ma) have been asleep. "We thought he was going to make 1t," said Sgt. Make White. "He was in cri tical but guarded condition last naeht and usually that means they're going to make it." The father, a self-e mployed real estate agent who'd been staying with friends in El Toro. repon edly was driving his white Dodge Aries on the wrong side of the road when he approached the T·intersecuon in the Irvine lndustnal Complex. Police said Davis apparently massed a stop sign pos1t1oned in the middle of the roadway and slammed through a senes of barricades before his carcolhded with the I 0.000-gallon water tank. The impact of the collision moved the water tank about 30 inches. said Sgt. Mike White. He did not know how much water was in the tank but sajd once that is detennined, offi cers will be able to calculate the speed at which Davis was d riving. Officers speculated that Davis may have been looking for a fn end at the ti me of the accident. PARK ... From Al DENTIST'S TRIAL .. ~ tenants' assoc1at1on has unsuccessful· ly sought to ovenurn approvals granted by the lk>ard of Supervisors and the Orange-County Planning Commission permitting the con- version. Both lawsuits, in vanous states of appeal, challenge land-use documents cenified b) the two gov- ernment bodies. From Al tnal so that th<.· defem.e attorneys could re' IC\\. the material once 11 \I.as turned over by the pro-.ecut1on Tuller told reponers the ne'-' ma- tenal incl udes fi\'e hours of tape recorded 1nterv1ews w11h witnesses. follow·up police reports and a hand- wnting expert's analysis of certain peninent material. Clonmger declined to discuss the nature of the new evidence. but said the defense allegat1on that witnesses were mum1dated was "with out substance ... He added there was "'no ment" to an) of the claims made b) Protopappas· attorneys and that there was "absolutely no supress1on of evidence in this case." Protopappas. 38. as charged with the deaths of three patients who died followms dental treatment at his 19th Street clinic in 1982 and I 983. The three - Andreassen. Patricia Craven and Cathryn Jones -are alleged to have died as a result of the improper administration of general anesthesia. The tnal. which began March 28 after a two-week jury selection pro- cess. onginally was expected to last from two to three months. The lawsuit Judge Flynn now as considering alleges park owners Bernard Syfan , Merrill Johnson. Ed· ward Stanton. Warren Hopkins and Howard Hopkinsengaged in re- taliatory tactics after the initial law- suits were filed in an attempt to "chill and obstruct" tenants from exercising their rights. BALLOT PROPOSITIONS FOR 1984 •.. From Al fina nce the construction. remodeling and maintenance of state prisons. State officials say the mone)' as the second increment of an estimated SI I btlhon needed to enlarge the ~tate pnsons to accomodate the estimated 52.000 inmates expected to be serving sentences in Cahforn1a b) 1987. Currently. the state operates 12 pmons. designed for 26.600 inmates and hold mg about 39.000 If 10 new prisons are bull1. a'i planned. an add1t1onal $559 m1ll1on w1 II be needed. •Proposition 18 \\Oulu authonLe the sale of $370 m1ll1on 1n state general oblt~at1on bonds 10 finance the acqu1s1t1on and de,elopment of stale and local parks and coastal rl·source areas "Jone of the mone) rnuld be <;pent unlcc;s allocated by the Legislature. • Proposition 19. would allow the state to sell $85 million 1n bonds to fund the Fish and Game Enhance· ment .\ct of 1984. lfpasc;cd . 11 would allow the Wildlife Conservation Board and the State Coastal Con- ~rvanq. to purchase marshlands. \l.etlando; and area~ harbonng en- dangered species Just Call 642-6086 Delly Pilot O.llvery 11 Ouerenteed •Proposition ZO would require that any person elected to federal. state or local office in Cahforn1a forfeit the office if Judged guilt) of li beling or slandering their opponent dunng an elec11on. The measure 1s an effort to answer mcreas1 ng concerns over cam- paign smear tactics and charges. sometime<; false. leveled 1n last-minute "hit pieces" and mailed to voters. •Proposition ? I would convert public pension fund assets. such as the 400.000-membcr State Teachers' Retirement System. into 1rusl funds. thus remo' 1ng const1tut1onal restnc- 11ons on the t) pes of in vl'Stments the funds are permitted 10 mal e. The wa) the funds present!)' are structured. fund trustees are not held accountable nor are they personally liable for bad an vestments they might make Also. the) are limited an the types of securities in which the) can invest. For instance. they are not permitted to own more than 5 percent of any company's common stock. If passed. the measure would remove investment restncuons, set minimum perfonnancc standards for trustees and would hold trustees personall y liable for bad an vestments. •PrOf>Olltlon %% would exempt from c1v1I service status certain management positions in the state's two largest reurement systems. the Pubhc Employee's Reurement S)s- tem ($20 billion m assets) and the State Teache r's Retirement S~stem (SI I billion in assets). • Proposltloo U . a consututional amendment exempting buildings up- graded to meet local safety seismic standard5 from property tax assessments as new construction A.not her exception to Proposition 13. 1t would permit landowners an ex· ""t'mpuon from fatr·market appraisal of propert) upgraded to meet local eanhqua~e c;afety ordinances. •Proposition %4 1s probabl) the most controversial measure on the ballot If passed. it would hm1t the amount of money the Legislature spend" on itself and would allC'r rulei> governing lcg1slat1ve operations. Kno"'n as the Ga nn Initiati ve. the ballot propos1t1on would di lute both the Assembly speaker's power and the power of the maJorit> party, p~scntly the Democrats. 1n running the Legis- lature. Wha t do you llkt aboul the Daily Piiot? What don't you like? Call lbt number at left and your message wUI be recorded, trao1crlbed and delivered to tbe appropriate editor. The 1amt U ·hour answering service may be tyed to record lelten to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters cohamo must include tllelr name and te lephone number for ve rlfteallon. No clrculatloo calls, pltase. Tell us what's on your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Put>llsher Clrc.ulatlon 71'1M2.....s33 CtaHtfled edverttetne 114/142-5871 All other depanmente Ma-4321 MAIN OFFICE )30 WMI lleV St (-Mii ....... CA "'-' _..,,,,_ Elm 156t\ c ""'• U... CA 1116>6 COO'Y•oct't •'llll 0<•~ r:,,.,, ~ c~"' N<> ... ~ t!Of ••11011.i...... ..,.,,,."I' -"" °' ...,....,,. ..,.,,,, '-•"" ..,., be ropo-)~ ,.,,,...,,.,, """',.i i.,. Chary Oowellby f 11tor ind Ass1stanr 11 , 1111• Pubhshpr Roe•m•ry Churchmen Con1ro1t~r ,._'°' O' <~ 'f'"J"I f:'Wr_,.. ~lh• ,..,.,'"9" lllt<I ., i.;a ......... C• I )r~· IUl'S 14A 8001 t 'C•OJ•fQi "'r r•• ,._ J4 7• ""--.nt'"I>' h ........ Ml c,o .....,.,,,.,.., Clrculetlon Tet..,tw>('" l lapt\en F C•raio l"rOOu<I l(C M.1naQ1" Otorta A Powatt r .. ,,61r ft ~' A J"'"l•t•l'IO DoNld L. WltHam1 (,llr.UUlll011 "4AMQ41" VOL n, HO. 108 Fair skies and much cooler air Nt-W•tlhet5".-C• Coutal =ron ... .. ii N ~a.c. ~ , .. ~ ..... ltWOllllllliild ~w.v 44 ~NC. : a ::L: ............ ... ._ °'*" -ININS -g;~z;:..i u M L-. IOfllOM 45 to .. .. ., "-f'il*l4 ~IO Vie ...... ~ .. 17 ... lotO. encl out '°,..... -""* ColwmlllLl .C. ., 41 ...... 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In 1111 Ul>l>"t 40s end 50t Temperatures HI L• 63 •• 73 43 ~ 33 37 33 5t 39 68 45 111 49 78 48 113 41 711 411 58 47 81 30 79 49 47 .. 12 57 48 38 Hout!Oll ~ Jedi-....... .,.._,,... ' ~ K.,_Clty Laa V19• UUll Rook Loe~ Louie Lubbocll M4Nl'lpNa Mlatnl Tl des TOOAY Secon4 '°"' a·4e p m Second higll 10 03 p m nl>MaDAY 5:05•m 11:31a.m 4:24p.m 10:40 p.m 73 52 ea 70 44 82 t5 ... ... 4t 71 ... ea '3 sa 45 •• 37 3-4 .. 47 53 43 40 441 115 12 eo Sun .... lodly a l 11.26 p ,,, • ,... weon.ecsey at s· tt am encs •tt 'IJMI a18 2tlpm Moon ,_ loelly at 8:58 pm. let• Weclnadly ail '4 11 m MCIMlllOllit' 11 IOOlpm. ICU COMIMTION 1·3 ..... l..J pOOt 1·3 pOOt 1-3 poor 1-3 pOOt 1·2 poot 1-3 ,.., s ... dlrec:llOf\ _....... NB 'Don Juan' pleads in.nocent, posts bail By STEVE MARBLE OflMO.-,,._.IWf A w~althy Newpon Beach man has pleaded not guilty to charges of sexually assaulting eight women. some of wh om were allegedly lu red to his home by newspa~r ads and promises of exotic gifts ·and va- cations. Paul William Jensen. 40, appeared Monday in Harbor Municipal Court, where he was taken into custody. He later was freed after posting $1 S0.000 bail. .\ preliminary hearing to de- 1ermine 1f Jensen should stand trial on 16 felony counts, including rape. kidnap and ra~ by object, was set for May2. Jensen allegedly attacked the women after luring them to his Court Street residence near the Newport Pier through newspaper ads and after meeting them at local nightspots. A former computer salesman at Microdata Corp., Jensen has de- scribed the charges against him" as "bizarre." He could not be reached today for further comment. Huntington Beach OKs pier restaurant Jensen was initially arrested and released on SS0.000 bail early this month in connection with alleged assaults on three women. according to Deputy Distnct Attorney Rick King. Bu t after newspaper anicles detail- ing the alleged rapes, fi ve more women came forward with new allegations. Sgt. Paul Henisey said. Hen1 sey said policC' have been contacted by as many as 18 women who claim they were attacked by Jensen. The police detective said some of the women were unwilling to press charges. Other cases were so old that the statute of limitations precluded criminal charges from being filed. he said. By ROBERT BARKER Of , ... 0.-, "°' ltafl -\controversial proposal lo buald a S300.000 l'-'O·SIOr\ re~taurant and mcetmg hall at the end of the Huntington Beach pier won approval from the cit y councal Monda) night. City Administrator Charles Thompson. who unveiled plans for the faciht) last year. wan1ed the structure completed an 11me to cash in on this summer's tounst trade. But 11 ran afoul of pier-goe rs who descnbed at "showy and plastic and resembli ng a bomb shelter or lifeguard station ... There also was a hassle wtth the Coastal Commission over parkmg spaces. City officials ordered Irvi ne - I .. -. : archjtect Jeffrey Gamer to come up wit h new plans after the initial uproa r. But the design accepted b) ofic1als Monday night was vet) much hke the ong1 nal one. It looks like a sailboat floatang on 1he Pacific, but the upstairs sec- ond-fl oor meeting room has been enclosed in glass and there will be no outdoor areas where people can th row "dead. stinking fish .. as one cntic feared. Ci ty engineers say more piJiogs are needed to suppon the two-story building but that work should start in two or three months. Officially they predict it be completed by the end of this year, but pnvatcly they say it more likely wall be ne xt spring. Easter egg hunt Candy and prizes will be~ovided during the annual Easter Hunt scheduled Saturday at the ountain Valley Recreation Center. 16400 Brook.hunt St. The hunt. co-sponsored by the Fountai n Valley Jaycees, is open to children up to 9 years old. For more informatio n. call 839-8611 . ~tef Inn Hotel 18700 Mac,Arthur Blvd. ArrcM fro"' f ohn Wovnt A11JK1rl IRVINE Reservation~ (714) 833-2770 . • • 'BUlll l ~ B u4R[1 '~- Irvine park off eFtng children's prograin ptUdrcn .6 yean and older are invited at llSJend 1 pon1on or lhett summer va<:ation at Irvine's Adventure Pll)1r0undin UnivenityCommunity Park, open &om 10 a.m. to' p.m. today th.rouah Friday. The alternative playsround experience ia inte"ded to promote CTQtlvf ty and lmaaination, and minl~vchll will be offered thia week at a minimal cost. further information can be obtained by 'callina 716-0SSl. Bae onrllaaJ pl'OfPUIJ •t Bi~~ OYJ'!'e'"! can J?Ut their two-wheele11 in top shape by paru~1pauna_ 1n a bike overhaul prosram torusht by the lrvioe 81c~le Oub. A SSO fee i1 charaed for Olympic coatinp, electrostatic s-intina ancl instruction on strippina. reusembly and safety checks. Further information can be obtained by callina 5.51-8638. Quake preparattoa dl9Cllued Local emersency preparedness experu will teach panici_pants how to prepare for an earthquake during worbhops Wednesday and Thursday, scheduled respec- tlvely for 7:30 p.m. in Deerfield and Northwood Community Parks. C::ity workers Harry Hu$1ins and Mike Weiss will explain home safe\)' tips, the city's emergency plan 14nd the Importance offorminJ a family action plan. F\Jrther informauon on the event can be obtained by callina 660-3814. 1 Jlaa~ement •kill• viewed ProActive Management Skills will be discussed at the Winner's Circle Brellfast April 18 at the Costa Mesa Neighborhood Center, 184.5 Park Ave. Millard MacAdam, founder of a business which trains executives in man.ment skills, will speak at the 7 1.m. breakfast. Fee is $7 1n advan<:_eJ~S8 at the door. For information and reservations, call Y()U.2715. Jlotlierl.ZJ6 teclmlqae. •b.ared A "Mommy and Baby" play group, offering an exchange of mothering techniques, support, fellowship and learn.ins, will be held each Wednesday afternoon at the Laauna Beach United Methodist Church nursery The proa:ram is open to mothers and babies up to 2 years and will be held from I to .5 p.m. at the church, 21632 Wesley Drive, South Laguna. Call 499-3088 for further information. P8yc1Jolao lecture. offered Three lecture programs will be offered this week by the Human Equation Center at 15.50 S. Coast Highway, Laauna Beach. An orif'nal show of music and humor, "Jung at Heart." wil be staged Wednesday at 7 p.m. Thursday Psychologist Jeff Owen will offer a career guidance prosram for teens from 4 to 5:30 p.m., while "Insight for Teens," a program of self-discovery, will be conducted Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon. The Human Equation Center is a community-based counseling, consulting and evaluation center, an art ~lery a nd a book store. Call 497-7408 for additional information. Women artt.ta topic of program A slide show and discussion on women artists will be presented Wednesday evening at the El Toro Public Ubrary, sponsored by the South Coast chapter of the National Organization for Women. Carol Algje will present a slide show from the Los Anaeles County Museum featuring 18th century textiles and needlecraft. The program will be held at 8 p.m. at the Library, on Raymond Way in El Toro. CALENDAR Tueeday,Aprll17 • 1:30 p.m., Oru1e Coaaty Plamlln& Commlaslon, Hall of Administration. Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • 7:30 p.m.. Mesa Coaaolldated Water District Advisory Commlt1ff. 1965 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa. Wedneeday, Aprll 18 • 9:30 a.m .. Oru1e Couty Board of Sapervlaon, Hall of Administration, Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • 3:30 p.m .. Coast CommuJty Colle1e District Board of Tnsteea, District Board Room, 1370 Adams Ave .. Costa Mesa. • 1 p.m., Seismic Safety, Dlaaster PreP,~eas Commlt1ff, Laguna Beach Police Department--l.1brary. S0.5 Forest Ave. • 7 p.m., Oruce Couty Water District Board of Dlrecton, District Headquarters, 10500 Ellis Ave., Fountain Valley. • 7J>.m., Foutala Valley City Condi -Ageaey for Commulty Developmeat, City Council Chambers. I 0200 Slater Ave. • 7:30 p. m., lrvlae CommuJty Services Comml11lon . Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Road. Irvine. / UCI health worken leave their alckbeda to ralae KholanbJp fund.a. •1 lftVS IUlaa ............... Anoney OenCrai Jotin Van de KampGllllld ... llM'. upoatheaateWide~WlldaPR.-•_. iu•uon child abut, a e:a •ioe dtlll ........... ltePticitm bY local law cnlorccmeat oftiain. Van ck k.amp, apa,k.ins 1n eo. Mela, ..._. ... manben of tbe crime-_filhti,. networt be rni••d IO ~iu the .. wami. up" ()('child._ 10 ~ Detlht;>orhood younplerl. .. The concept it the ume -lookiaa out ,_ Ol9e another," Van de Kamp said. .. But~. •IMYbelPill a lifr ... The attorney~ is supiponina a ~1111d llW that would fund tn1n1ng seuaona on cbild ._ fDr members of Neiahbothood Watch. It alto wollld pay IJr computerizin1 informatjon on 1u1pected child~ Neilbborbood Watch, a ftel"'Otk of,,,.... ....... commu11iry who help poljce trac~ down crimin•IA ..., tndjtiooally been teared toward preventina ~ But, Van de Kamp sajd, as the number or~ has declined, sq has interest in tht ne.Pbortlood crime-faahtin& croup. The attorney aenerat give Neiahbotbood WalCb credit for helpina reduce these crimes. "Once the crisis is past. interest recedes." he said . .. Now is the time to stan talk.inaabout our kids.•• laid Van de Kamp, a featured speaker at the 90th annual IUl\e Sheriff's Association ConfCrcnoe held at the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Dan's Band picks up $5,000 for scholarships in UCI wacky walk Oran~ Coast pohcc chiefs, however, expused cone.em With Van de K.amp's proposalsanddi~ &bat interest in Nei&hborhood Watch is flaaina. "Success &reeds a greater interest. Peop&e feel like they are getting somewhere, that they're notJUSt ~ their time," said Huntington Beach Police Chief Eatte RobitaiUe. By ANDREA ADELSON OttMDllllJ,.....,. homemade blue-and-gold anteater float. The paper-and-chicken wire rendition of UCI's campus Robitaille said by turning the membn'sbip of a city's watch program loose on child abuse, new problems muW be created. UC Irvine's answer to Pasadena's Doo Dah Parade mascot was fitted over Bak.in's pickup truck. "Child abuse as something that ~ strai&bt to t.llc heart." be said. "Everyone comes running to the ddeme .. about 160 m~h aod even if the c::uc turns out to bt unfounded. it s sometimes too late to back off. raised about $5,000 for the Daniel and Jean Aldrich Merit "In terms of it being different from the mainstream Scholarship fund, organizers reported Monday. activities. it was quite a standout." said Student Activities The infamous Pasadena lawnmower brigade was Director Randy Lewis, who chaired the t.hreo-day open absent from th~ trib.ute to u q·s retiring and founding house planning effort ki cked off by the wallc for Aldrich. chancellor, but in the~r st~d were equally oflbcat parad~rs About 600 peopple. signed pledges of scholarship who collected contnbut1ons and walked a meandenng support, and even the statd chancellor aot into the act· he m1 e tnrou&h the campus Saturday during the shed his traditional shirt and tie for a blue Dan-A-Thon onc-time-onfy "Dan-A-Thon." T-shirt. "It's very easy to hurt or even ruin a percot in lhiuon of cue. It's toU&)l even for the hiahlY trained experu. I hardly think it's the sort of thlna the aenen.J poJ)U.Lation should be turned loo1e on ... The Sushi Eaters of America, a.k.a. the UCI About 14,000 people, including 1 200 prospective publications office staff, expres.sed their devotion to students, were drawn to the campus o~er the weekend. Ne~rt Beach Police Chief Charles Gross said Vao de Kamp s proposal could result in ··a degree o~~" Ald rich by dressing up as a sushi bar. Lewis said. Other health office workers made their point with As for innovative tries at scholarship fundraising, Gross said members of the Neighborb Wa1Q network in Newport Beach already arc aware of crime problems beyond buJ'llary and said the trairuna sessions Van de Kamp has backed could be a necdleu expente. bedpans. The "unknown department" came masked with "it's a great angle,'' Lewis said. "I don't know if people brown paper bags. A senior citizens' banjo band would have responded in the same way," he said. if the entertained aod those sure of foot walked the route focus weren't Aldrich. backwards. The chancellor intends to leave the helm on June 30 Although no sweepstakes prize was awarded, student after 22 years. Jack Peltason, a Washington D.C. Jonatbon Dakin might have been deserving with his education lobbyist, has been named as his rcplacc;,,ent. Van de Kamp said the importance of .. eradicaU. .. child abuse was brou&bt home to him during a rcocnt tour ofSan Quentin. He said be was .. lbocked .. by bow manyo( the state's worst criminals were abused as cbild.rv\. Key to Bolsa Chica future? It's the wat€T Ever meet Terry Goggin? You ha ven't? Well. 1fyou're interested in $ood livingon the Orange Coast It looks as 1f yo u're going to have to get acquainted with him. Terry's full name. with title. is As· scmblyman Terry Goggin. 0 -San Bernardino. He's 1he chairman of the Assembly's Natural Resources Committee and he has a great deal to say about the- Bolsa Chica wetlands. If you read as many newspapers as I do. you can't help but wonder if any of the space eaters know what they're talking about. In the Los Angeles Times there were seven columns last week devoted to arguments over the Bolsa Chica wetlands. As you devoted readers know. ever since I moved here permanently 27 years ago, there have been annual arguments over what to do with the Bolsa Chica wetlands. Many of the arguments arc excellently phrased. But the minute an argument is advanced upJumpsa politico to attack. Problem 1s that not one of the scrcechers in 27 years has recognized the numberone problem -not only for developing the Bolsa Chica wetlands but also the number one problem for all new developments on the Orange Coast. That's the shortage of domestic water. With the present population. and the present land utilization the combination of WALTER BUllOUGHS water imported from the Colorado Ri ver. of water taken from the state water project. and heavy rain which has allowed the big Orange County aquifer to store water under ground as well as above ground, we've gotten by-just. Chief of the sources of imported water are.of course. the Colorado River and the state water project. The state water proJCCl lost on the defeat of the peripheral canal. While thCTC are a few substitutes for the pcnpheral ca nal on the drawing boards, there really isn't much chance of their increasing the supply of water for Orange County. Between hereand Stockton, there arc still thousands of acres of not-yea agriculturally de veloped land. That means, regardless of how much Nonhem California water will be di verted for the South, new agncultural use will happily grab it. It's might y questionable that more agriculture w11l be a good thing for the state as a whole, considering the out-migration ofbig industries. But it won't stopgrowingand as water is diverted. agnculture will gobble most of it. In oneof1he stones I've read recentl}. there is a statement ••tht> ocean entrance (to Bolsa Chica) would create the waterway that t>X"isted years ago." So what. The projection by the State Coastal Conservan- cy is fora 1,800.slip marina and develop- ment of5, 700 homes. That's going to take a lot of water. Domestic water. Mike Adams. a city planner for Hunt- ington Beach. says that before annexing any part oftbe wetlands to Huntington Beach a land11se must be established. Huntington Beach city planning depart- ment has recommended a low density residential (R-1 ) zoning. Adams said. "Well. okay. recommend away. but that hardly squares with a manna for any number ofboats." The minimum number I have seen is 1,000 but the usual figure 1s 5. 700 homes and I ,800 marina slips. That means 1.800 boats for the harbor. Now just in case all this hasn'taot you into a lather, let me point out that beginning next year the State of Arizona has first dibs on 60 percent of the water from the Colorado River. This is no foohng.Anzona already hasa diversion station complm and ready to go. There is indeed an answer to the dilemma bu1there1s no chance of using 1t while the pros and cons have their mouths open. their lungs filled with a1rand keep shouting at each other. You may remember that when .50,000 Orange County individuals urged establish- ment of a campus of the University of California on the Irvine Ranch, they did so in the expectation that a great many problems could be solved through the brains and expcniseoflhe university. In the matterofwaterforalloftheOrange Coast and. indeed for aJI of Orange County, I know there is that expertise available-' nght in the UCJ Collece ofEngineerina. · The big problem is that none of the hutie users are w1lhng to go for a simple solution. I talked to one the otber day whose attitude was "Well. maybe there'sgoing to be a shorta~ofwaterall ri&ht. but we've cot the political clout. Sowc'llget first call on what water there is." So longasanygrouporany area thinks ii can out politic all the other arcu, then there's nothing but big trouble ahead. Walter Burroughs is the Pilor·s founding publisher. Tar truck fire in Mesa halts Newport Boulevai-d tl-affic A woman motorist reported the theft of $300 wonh of pottery from her car. parke<l,4n a lot outside the Home and Garden Center. I 5333 Culver Dnve. • • • Laguna Canyon Roed was closed for a short time about 11:30 a.m. Monday as Irvine Co. ranch workers moved a bull from one side of the road to the other. store in South Coast Plaza after ~h~ alJcgedly switched the pnce tags on several items of clothing Az1za Sckander. 45. was cited and released af\er the alleged theft of a dress. belt. blouse and skirt "alued at S 110. QO • • • A ladies gold n ng was sv.1pc-d from ~tole a tw<><hanncl radio valued at SI 500 • • • ~omcone stoic a gym bag contain- ing S 100 in cash and miscellaneous items v. h1le its owner was playi'na rackt'tball at the-l:m Caballeros Racqut>t & Sports Club The northbound lanes of Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa were closed for about an hour early this morning when a tar truck causht fire at the lntersccaion of Newport Boulevard and 17th Street. police said. Huntiniton Beach A security guard unsuccessfully chased after six naked ¥Ouths who had been skinny dippinJ in the twimmina pool at Manna Hi&h School. The 1uard uld the youths left their clothes at the poolside alona with some beer and marijuana. ••• A 200-plJon fish tank and 1 stand ror the tank were stolen from • residence on the 8200 block of San Anaclo Drive. The tank and ltlnd are valued It $2,000. ••• An unknown pen.on shot out a window at the Huntiqton Beach 1nn, 21112 Pacific Coul Hiahway. Police laJd the tinak ahot JUlt missed Itri.kins a eeCurity pud and ap-Peu'cd to have been dllcharaed from a nearby trailer oark. I • • /\bout s 1.200 in filhina sear .... taken from 1if open Prate on the I~ block of Hanover Lane. ~--ob A resident rtponcd Monday that hi1 car wu vandalited sometime I The road was ordered closed be· cause of the fear that the flaming truck might explode. a pohce spokesman said. ND explosion occurred. The truck burst into flames about .5 a.m .. he said. It was not immed1atel~ Sunday evening. The windshield was smashed and several dents were pounded into the side of the vehicle which was parked in th 2700 block of Glenneyre Street. • • • Police responded to a report of a rcckleu driver operatina a motor- cycle through several front yards on Anita Street Monday momina bu\ the alleaed suspect was aone pnor 10 their arrival. • • • A stolen vehicle was reported 1n the 1400 block ofOlenneyrc Street Mon- day but it WIS later IOC"ated on Oaviota St.recL Police said the owner was a non-midcnt, unfamiliar with the area and had m11placcd his Yehicle. Newport Beach A Newport Beach man reported the theft of two auto speakers valued at S20 from h11 car perked on East Ocean Front Mondav. . . ' A Newpon. Bea.ch woman reported the theft of her punt from her unlocktdcarparkcd in the 2 IOOblock ofBrittol Monday . known what cau~d the vehicle to 1gn1tc Firefighters were able to douse the flame 1n short order after the an1t1al rcpons were taken • • • A Newport Beach woman reported th e theft of a gold and diamond watch valued at S 10,000 from her home in the 400 block of North Star Lane last week. • • • American Communications Network. located at 4041 MacArthur Blvd, "ported the theft of an IBM typewriter val ued at SI . I 00 Monday. • • • M~k Ott lntemat1onal tnc. at 2SO Newport Center Drive. reponcd the theft of six IBM typcwnten takto somet1mt over the weclcend. The ~wntcrs wm: valued at about S6.SOO lrrine Ju venile pranksten hit a con· dom1n1um complex near the Rancho San Joaquin aotf counc Monday niaht. pu hma a car into a water trap on the l Sth pctn. npp1na a car door off a ve hicle and pullina a c1mut brtaker The c.r was pulled from the count lake this momina. and 1n- vestipton art tryinJ to u1ck down tht perpetrators, pohce sakl • • • ' • • • Aluminum bantock worth $7.000 was discovered m1ssmg Monday from ACD. 1900 Main St. The company has lost SS.000 m bronze and $46,000 worth of impellers through thefts in r«cnt weeks. • • • A SI 3,000 1984 Thundcrbira was stolen sometime Monday before noon from behind the Air:poner Inn. The vehicle is owned by Airway Rent-a-car. Coatall_. Two teen boys were urntcd late Monday anemoon when pohoe caU&ht them alleaedl)' buralaririna the iatchcn at the Sonora Elementary School, 966 Sonon Road. Officers mponded to the IOCnc after a buraJary alarm went off' and theypunucd the two Juveniles. qed 1.5 and I 3. who ~ 1ttn leavifta the kitchen. A smaJI amount of petty cash WIS recovered on the tcbool an>undl. • • • A locked 1tora1t container oo lbc 3500 block of tfy1and Avenue was broken into over the weekend and $420 worth of ~u.ipmtnt was stolm The ID'powcred scnC't'ltOr 1nd leather bth and tool baa reported m1ss1n1 bclonaed to t'he El Monte-be.std firm of Ben mith. Inc. • • • A Sant.a Ana woman was an-ested Sunde' at Nordstrom·, department • the Ma y Company department store at South Coast Plaz.a unda't and a Costa Mesa man was arre ted in tht> parking structure alleged!) n~1ng With the S 11 0 nng. James M Lind· qu1st, 22. was taken into custod) after store employees all~edl> sav. him reach into an open nng case in the fuhionjewelry depanment and palm the nng. Jl'ountalll Valley Burglars entered a residence 1n the 11000 block of Quam Avenue and stole Smith & We son hanc:tauns. a Colt "volvcr, holsters. money and jewelry for a total loss ofS2.100 • • • Thievn entertd a vehicle 1n the 18000 block of Quart.rz A venue and • • • •\ woman fled with about SSOO be tool.. from a purse while tr)'ln& on cloth~ at the M1m1 -Picrrc S) bndal shop. I 120 Warner Ave. • • • Burglars ransacked a home m the 16000 block. of San Gabnel Street and stole a microwave. camera and Sold watch after ransack1na desks and drawers in th' bedroom and den. • • • Would-ht thieves cavsed abouf SI 00 damage when they tried to break into theRad10 Shack, 161 57 Hart>or Blvd. The buntlin& buralan uted a crowbar to bn:a\ a dald 6olt lock but abandoned effons wbeo confronted Wllh a second dead bolt lock It the lop oft~ door Police seeking suspect in parking lot slaying A wamnt ,,.,.. 1s ufd for a l l·year-old Buena Pit\ man 1n connccuon With the fatal thootina of Rudy Bella Romero. 23. of Anaheim durina an 111umcn1 over a loud radio Anaheim pohcc S.t 8111 Wriah1 wd the wamnt WIS 1 ucd Monday for be~ Rohen Arnold for the Apnl ~ • ihOOlJ.nl of Romero ln lb PAI iuna k1' or an lllAJ\mcr\t comp&cx.. Romero. bo ot an stomach. died Friday at UCt Medical C'enter. P()hct said Romero had 1 repu. tabon for playma bu tnrl: le> loud. nd an IJ'IWftCnt o tho t'1ld10'1 \'Olum' ~ t.o lhc s.b u,._ A.f °"'"99 Cout OAtLY PILOl'ITUMday, Apt" 17, 1914 Embassy gunman kills 1, injures 11 Libyan antt-Khadafy protesters ta et of submachine un bullets LO NOON (AP)-A aunman fired a submachine aun from a window of the Libyan Embassy today at Libyan students demonstrating apinsl Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy. A policewoman was killed and 11 students were iJtjured, Scotland Yard said. Police rushed to the embassy. on fashionable St. James's Square a few blocks from Buckingham Palace. and sealed off surroundin& streets. A dozen marksmen were dropped by helioopter and a busload ofblue-bercted soldicn moved into position. A short time after the mid-morning shooting. a man emerged from the embassy and surrendered. But officials said they did not know ifhe was the gunman. A staffer of the Libyan news agency JANA said the man was journalist SaJah Najim, head of JANA's London bureau. The staffer, wbo would not give her name, said: "He was there covering what was happening and as he came out of the embassy, he was arrested." Dozens of police, many wearing bulletproof vests. kept guns trained on the building from behind trees. lamp posts and police cars. Four and a half hours after the 1hoo1jng. police spokesman Tim Mahoney told reporters: "We have established contact with ixople inside the premises ... He would not elaborate. The shooting was the latest in a stnng of attacks on Libyan exiles opposed to Khadafy. Last month, five bombs in London and Manchester injured 26 people. Authorities arrested th ree Libyan students, deported five other Libyans and warned Libyan diplomats here that Britain would 1tot tolera1e auch atllCb. Tboac wounded in today's 1t11ek were liken to Westmins~~ HOlpita.l. where the Polioewoman and rwo seriously uvurec:t demonstrators underwent emettency 1~ry. Tbe policewoman, Yvonne Fletcher, 25, later died. a poUoe •Pokesman said. . Home Secttury ~n Brittan was c:oordin.atioa lhc polioe an~ .army action around lhc Libyan Embusy. ~e M~~atet Marpre~ Tb&J.cber, in Portuo.I on an OffiC&ll Vllll, but WU be1n& kept informed or develop- ments, ber office in London &aid. Witnesses said some 70 anti-Khadafy Libyan students, many of them wearil'\& masks to avoid !dentification, assembled in th~ 1quare and walked across 11 to the embassy, known officially as the Libyan People's Bureau. Police, who normally do not carry guns. kept the protesters behind barricades.. Across !he street. two aroups of 20 counterdemortstraton also were hemmed in by officen. Richard Bowden, 31 . a salesman who used to work in Saudi Arabia. said the anti-Khadafy students were shout!ng in Arabic "Khadafy hangs students" when the shOOlll'\I began. ,"Th~re were no scrca~s. People jl£Sl started fallina. I don t think anyone realized what was happening," Bowden told The Assoctiated Press. Freelance ioumaljst Brian CartmetJ said be beard "what seemed like a firecracker." But then, "I saw bullets hil the pavement and realized it was small arms fire." "The policewoman. I 5 feet in front of me, crumpled to the ground, clutching her lower stomach. (Her) hat rolled slowly into the guner while three of four officers. shouting 'My God,' ran past me,'' he said. ORANGE COUNTY'S RELAXING MUSIC STATION IS KDCM 1D!l.1 FMSTERED Coffee'n Chee g No Strings Checking brews up interest no matter what your balance is. Huntington Saving~; No Stnngc; Checking ,., th£> ch£>cking account that really Ii~ up to its name. Your account earns antere!>t no matter what your balance is -511•% compounded daily on every dollar. That's 5.47% annually. And with No Strings. then><; no minimum balance requirement. So your money earns inte~t every day Evt'n 1f your balanc.l' 1s only a dollar. Whats more. No Stn~c; Checking means no service charge. So ynu tan write a "> many thecks as you like No Strings Checking 1<; a smart way to make money with U'>. But 11'"> not the only w<ly. 11 you hclvt' $2.500 ur O)(lrf to r,ave, the Huntington I nvt"'ltment fund pJys tH~h. money mdrktt interest. compoun~I J<11ly. w1tht,ut tying up your money You can mal-E' as many withdrawals as you like. And you can relax. knowing your Hunt- ington Investment Fund account is fully insured up to $100,000 by the f~ral government. No Strings Checking and the Huntington Investment Fund. Two easy ways to make m<>r\' for your money at Huntington Savings. Ju!tt stop by for all the money-maki~ details.. And don't fo~t to help yourself to a fresh cup of coffee. It '!I alw;l)"S on us. Now you know why your neighbor banks at rn HUNTINGTON SAVINGS~~ J.ountaJn Valky Branch• 11431 Broolhunt. Corner of Slmr. F'Ollnt.lin V.1llty. CA 92/QS <7l4l ~ Newland Center Brar-<h • JQ?SO Bf<Kh Blvd .. Comtr nf A<l.1m~ HunllnJ(lon !k«Kh. lA Q2b4317141 ~-7lJ2 Main Offict f:J967 W.mwr Aw . Cornc>r of ~kkn ~t Huntington Be h. CA 92b47 (714 ) 84Ub00 •I •t111rflr• AT \1 ~-""'"' , • Did mining 'surprise' senators? WASHINGTON (AP) -A hectic seven days in which the Senate voted first to continue support of Nicaraguan guerrillas and then against helping them mine seaports is raising the question; What did C~mgress know, and when did Congress know it? The CIA issued a statement Monday saying. "Since the first of this year. the subject of mining of Nicaraguan ports has been discussed with either members or staffers of the committees and other members of the Congress 11 times." Although it had been known for some time that the rebels were mining the harbors. the CIA's involvement did not break into the news until April 6 and senators are saying they were surpnsed to hear it. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. [).Mass .. who led both the fight to cut off support for the rebels and the battle for the anti-mining resolution. said he was noTiware ofthe CtA 's role when he made the first motion o n April 4. Kennedy's effort to kill a S2 I million appropnat1on for aid to the guerrillas was defeated 61-30. His move to condemn the mining was approved 84-12. The votes April I 0 favoring the condemnation of the mining included 45 senators who previously had approved the $21 million appropriation. Senate Majonty Leader Howard Baker. R-Tenn .. says he sees no contrad1ct1on between the two votes because he draws a clear distinction between support of the rebels. ~h1ch he fa vors. and mining Nicaraguan harbors. which he opposes. At any rate he has said he believes few senators knew anythmg about the mining when they cast the first vote. Stones after 'Satisfaction' that Kte4n. no1 band members, OWMd t-"- rtght• to the RoMng Stonee' IOflgt mld r• ~~·meeting In ~ Savoy Hotel, "I wattytng to be Y«Y ~ and coot and When A*" Ktetn came In I just bleW f!1Y top. I aafd you owe $800,000 to the band. I •tarted )'91tlng at him," Jagg« testified. "I chaMd htm down the eotridor of tN Savoy Hot• end ~ out of the buttdlng," JllQOef Mid. "We newr Nd a reaonat>tl ~llCUMlon:• he .ctded wryfy. Bush departs for Geneva WAS~INGTON .<AP) -Yi.cc President George Bush. vowmg to avoid a "slluuung match" with the Soviets. flew to Geneva today to enlist support at a 40-nation disarmament conference for a U.S. proposal to end the threat of chemical warfare. "If successful it will elevate the hopes of mankind." Bush told reporters at Andrew!! Air Force Base Monday niJht before his departure for Swttzerland. "ll 1s our hope the Soviet ~n1on .will aive our broad ranging proposals ~ous cons1dcrallon." The vice president amved at Geneva's Cointrin ~irpon early this af\cmoon and was whisked away m a limousine without spc.ak1 na to reponers. A U.S. official who asked not to be named said Bush would have "his pnva1e lime" today before addre~!'tni the conference Wednesday. The U.S. plan. announced by Pre 1dent Reapn at h" ~pnl 4 news conference. prov1dei. for enforcement and venflcation of eiust1na bans on the ust of chemical weapons. The proposal followed White HouK confirmation last month thll Iraq hu used poison aas 1n 11 war with Iran and ch.a.racs -denied by the Soviets -that the Red Army and its alhcs have ultd chemical weapons in Afa,h1n11tan and Southcan A51a. The Soviet news aacncy Tass has t·alled the Bu-.h tnp "a pro~nda tnck the Whue Hou~ 11 go1n1 to UK 10 camouOagc and JU t1 ry a pro~ram for the ~~cdy buildup ofm \;hem teal arm\ r'l<'n nl · Honie construction tales sharpest dlv;e BJ U. .u.edas.4 Presa W "'8HrNOTON -Consmaction of new homes plumm4tcd 26.6 pem:nt in March, the sharpest drop aiaoe • the Census Bureau ~n keepjq 1ucb rccorcls l' yean ~ qo, tbe aovemment Mid today. The bureau Mics'tbat new home construction fell to a tealOnaUy adjusted annual nae • of J .64 million units. down from the strona rate of 1.23 ; million units io February. Analysts were surprited ~ • severity of the March decline. Most had expected a t retrenchment from the unusually bi&h February rate, nothing as severe as what actually occWTcd. The bouaina report was the latest economic 111ti1tic indicatina tbac the • growth oflhe economy slowed sharply in March.1n receat days, the government has announced tha.t retail Mlet fd1 by 2.2 percent.while unemployment showed no improve. ment. breaking a chain of six consecutive months of • improving jobless figures. 'Liberator• Clar.t dead CHARLESTON. S.C. -Re- tired Gen. Mark W. Clark, who led the U.S. 5th Army on its long fight from Africa to the liberation of Rome and accepted the German surrender that ended World War II in Italy, died today. He was 87. Clark. a four-star general whose highly decorated military career spanned three wars. entered the Medical University of South Caro- lina for tests March 20. but by Sunday was listed in critical and CLAR1' deteriorating condition. He died shortly after I a.m. tOO.y. Clark became the liberator of Rome in 1944, commandins the 5th Army as it chased German forces out of Italy. He was later supreme commander of the United Nations forces in the Far East and the signer of the Korean War armisllce in 1953. Mostly men a t the top WASHINGTON -The State Depanment's top ranks remain dominated by men, with women and minonties holding only a fraction oflhe highest positions m the foreign service. a congressional report says. The report. released recently by the Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues. said women made up 26 percent of the • foreign service in 1981. the same as in 1970. During that period. promotions tended to be slower for women, the study wd. CALIFORN IA Klnlnger protest In SF SAN FRANCISCO-Carrying signs reading "Mash U.S. Imperialism,'' about 500 people demonstrated during a forei$n policy address by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Seventy-five were arrested and 85 were cited. Riot-equipped pohce booked several demon- strators for investigation of assaulting officers, but most r~ived citations for failing to obey orders to disperse. a misdemeanor. The demonstrators. some carrying placards.reading "Kissinger is a Killer,'' gathered Monday at the Hilton Hotel to protest U.S. involvement in Latin America. Shuttle aloft atop 747 EDWARDS AlR FORCE BASE-The space shuttle Cha~lenger lifted off from this desert base aboard a Boeing 747 Jet al dawn today en route back" to its Aorida launch site. NA.SA officials said. The jumbo jet. with its space-fanng piggyback load. took off at 5:4 7 a.m. PST into 1 sky scattered with clouds on the first leg of the cross-coun try fl ight to Kelly Air Force Base at San Antonio. Texas. and then to C'ape Canaveral in Florida said Les Rcinertson of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Ames-Dryden Flight Research Facility. De Lor ean delay asked L.Os ANGEL~ -John De Lorean's attorneys say a ~awsu1t filed by cl~1man1s to his San Diego Councy estate imposes a financial hardship that harms their ability to defend De Lore.an in the cocame trafficking trial sclleduJcd to start Wednesday. Attorneys Donald Re and Howard Weitzm~n said they would ask U.S. District Judge Robert Takasugi today to postpone Wednesday's opening statements. "Don and I both agree that we can't ethically proceed Wednesday," Weitzman said Monday. "We're going to ask the court to set aside the trial date and allow us time to respond" to the lawsuit. Spill prompts 300 to nee S~NTA BARBARA -~esidents ofa square block near Highway 101 spent the night away from their homes as firefighters tried 10 seal a cylinder leaking a cbemic~I irr:ttant aboard a truck trailer early today, a ftrc official said. The task offindmg the leak was difficult because the chemical was escaping from one of 24 cylinders holdina 1.500 pounds ofliquid each, said Fire Chief Ken Bishop. Each container, with a total weight of one ton, had to be moved from the front of the truck to the rear for inspection. he said. About 300 people were evacuated. A million Brazilian• prota t SAO PAULO. Brazil -As shouts of "The dictatorship will end" echoed from a rally of more than a million people. the military regime offered to compromise on demands to speed up the timetable for direct p~idential elections. The Sao Paulo crowd jeered when they he.ar<l .the compromise proposal by President Gen. Joao F1gue1rcd_o. who went on television and radio to addre~ the nation shortly af\er the demonstration bepn. F1guc1redo. after an emergency Cabinet meeting Monday. sent a proposed amendment to Congress calling for direct elections for pre~1dcn1 m November 1988 -two years sooner than prev1~usly proposed. Opposition leaders are demanding that direct clect1ons be held in time to select the successor of F1gue1rcdo. whose term runs out Marth 15. 1985 Troops pillage v111.,a HARARE, Zimbabwe -Government troops raped tortured, k.ill~ and ~1arved villaaen duri~g a tw<>-month hunt for d1ss1dents 1n Matabcleland province, acoordina to a rcpon by Roman Catholic officials. Prime Minister Robert Mugabe. while promisi~ to examine the allcgat1ons, suucstcd the report's ch.ief author was usina the charaes to Curr)' favor with Mupbe's chief rival. Joshua Nkomo. whose main tribal strol\lhold ii ~atabeleland. On Monday. Mugabe threatened to clamp t1&h1. although unspcciOed. restrictions on foreipi 1ou~alists because of overseas re pons of aJleacd atrociues by his army. 'U.S. boycotting Soviets? MOSCOW -The Sov1ct news qcncy Novosti today accused the United States of "tryina to boycott Soviet part1c1p~ltion" in the 198• O lympic Games in Lot Anaelcs. "Four ycan aao. Walhiniton boycotted the Moscow Olympics and now 1\ 1s 1ryina to boyoou Soviet pan1c1pation 1 n the Los Anaeles Games," the commentary said. The U.S. bo~ou of the 1980 MolCOw Games was in protest of the December 1979 Soviet invuion of AfJhanistan. Novosu reitcraced Soviet complaints thll the Untted Slates had ovcr<0mme~ialiud the Loa Anatle' Gamr . flulcd to auaran~ Soviet albino' 1«un1y. and that u !>tanned to IJow CO\'PlllC by Radio L1bcriy and R1d10 Free Europe, hich Hu~ krtmlin co'n 1tkn ··,ub\ tl'\1\.~:· ~ I ----- Fullinoon tiedtoloonybehavl __ Sole •ani•or of Brooklyn maeeacre le carried by unlden- ...... ,, 11 tifted woman after betnc foan4 · alln ln apartment. NY police offering massacre reward NEW YORK (AP) -Police have offered a SI 0,000 reward and opened a special phone line to help find whoever pumped bullets throu~ the heads of two women and eight children, a massacre authorities believe may have stemmed from "bad blood" in drug dealings. wax museum" after what authorities called the worst mass killing in the city's history. NEW YORK (AP) -A study of 4,000 !Jle~ta.lly ill patie.n~ over nearl~ two decades andacates that the diseue'11eventy van es with the motidns of the sun lr1d' moon, with psychotica showioa their most bizam behavior when the mooo is full, a psychiatnst says. The new study found that at the time of the full moon -and especially durina the full moons of the summer and fall -psychotic men~I patients displAy their most inap- propnate appearance and strongest irratioruil fears, said or. Charles Mirabile, a psychiatrist at The institute of Living in Hanford, Conn. For centuries. poets have speculated about the ill effects of the moon. Shakespeare spoke of people becoming "fools by heavenly com- P.ulsion," and the poet John Milton wrote of 'moon-struck madness." The word "lunacy" itself comes from the Latin word for the moon, luna. "It has been recognized for some time that patients with mood disturbances tend to become ill during panicular seasons of the year," Mirabile said. But the new research suggests "that scaso~I effects are much more pervasive than has generally bttn realized " he said. · Speaking Monday at a sY.mposium spon- sored by the Institute for Child Developm ent Rcse.arch. Mirabile said th e 4.000 patients were observed daily for more than 18 years with the aid of a computer. Mirabile's study also found that disease severity climbs not only when the moon is full but also at the time of the new moon. when the lunar image disappears and no moonliJ!lt appears. This effect was most apparent 1n spnng and winter. Mirabile said. The seasonal and lunar variations were m<>1t obvious in psychocac pahentt, but wen alto evident in patients wilh other mental disorders. be ta.id. Psychosis is defined at a mental diJofder marted bf ~ prr- 10nality and loss of contac:i wuh reali6. Scaaonal variations in mental illnesa have previously ~n attributed to cbaQeet in the len,th of day end niat;lt -cbanaes brouaht about by the motion of the sun ttlative 10 ihe Eanh. The link between illness and the invi1iblc new moon. however, 1uaaest1 that the brain may alao be rctponding lO the same lunar effects on aravity that are responsible for risina and f&JHna tides. "Perhaps, durins the courw or evolution, The slayings may have been drug-related because milk sugar used to cut heroin and foil often used to wrap narcotics were found in the blood-spattered a~nment in a worltins-dass Brooklyn neighborhood. police said Monday. Most of the victims were found sitting upright in chairs. A slain pregnant woman still held a spoon and pudding can in her hand as though feeding a baby, and a crying infant -the only survi vor -crawled among the bodies. In the Colombian drug world. murdenng children is a revenr tactic that has been used as a reprisa against adults, said · Patrick Murphy, first deputy police com- missioner. Although the victims were Pueno Rican, the revenge motive was being investigated. he said. D emo hopef ul s pay taxes The women. ages 20 and 24. and the children. ages 3 to 14. were found Sunday m front of a blaring TV set like figures "in a Writing winners listed NEW YORK (AP) -Here arc the winners of the 1984 Pulitzer Prizes for Journalism and for Letters and Drama: JOURNALISM Public Service: The Los Ange les Times. General Local Reporting: Newsday (Long island. N.Y.) Si>«ial Local Reporting: Kenneth Cooper. Joan FitzGerald, Jonathan Kauf- man. Norman Lockman. Gary McMillan. Kirk Scharfenberg and David Wessel of The Boston Globe. National Reporting: John Noble Wilford ofThe New York Times. International Reporting: Karen Elliott House of The Wall Street Journal. Editonal Wntmg: Alben Scardmo of The Georgia Gazette. Editonal Canooning: Paul Conrad of The Los Angeles Times. Spot News Photography: Stan Grossfeld of The Boston Globe. Feature Photography: Anthony Suau of The Denver Post. Commentary Vermont Royster of The Wall Street Journal. Criticism: Paul Goldberger of The New York Times. Feature Writmg: Peter Mark Rmearson of The Seattle Times. LETTERS AND DRAMA Fiction: ··1ronweed" by William Ken- nedy. Drama: "Glengarry G len Ross" by Da vid Mamet. History: No award. Biography: "BookerT. Washmgton: The WizardofTuskegee, 1901-1915" by Louis R. Harlan. Poetf): "Amen can Pnmiuve" by Mary Oliver. General Non-Fiction: ··The Social Transforma11on of Amencan Med1c1ne" by Paul Starr. Special Citation: Theodor Seuss Geisel. Music: "Canti del Sole for Tenor and Orchestra" by Bernard Rands. DMITSD STAT&S aAall8DPTCY CODIT ' USTllll DISTUCT or CA.L..J_POlllli\ ,..,....., In re : CKAPTll 11 PllOClllDJ..CS WASHJNQTON (A P)-Walter F. Mondale and his wife, Joan, filed a joint return Monday, the filing deadline listing $31 6.330 in income and S97.48 I an total taxes. ' Gary Han. campai~ing for the Democrauc pres1- dent1al nomination in Missouri . said Monday that he and his wife, Lee, paid S36.426 in taxes on an income of S 125,474. The Colorado senator also said he and his wife paid $4.096 in Colorado ta xes and S40 an Maryland taxes. The Rev. Jesse Jackson and has wife. Jacquehne, paid $30,635.16 in taxes on an income ofS 11 5.109.88. Great loans. Great rates. Home Improvement loans for Great American living! Add on, put in a pool or spa, modernize your kitchen ... or whatever. At a great, low Home Improvement Loan rate. Pick up your appl1cat1on a1 any Creal American office. Phone for details and current rates: Orange County 644-1634 (Call Collect) PAClrlC llZP&aas. Ille. 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California's new clean air pro- gram requires most cars and light trucks to have SMOO CHECKS &-/ery two years. Uceoeed, privately-OWned shops offer inspection and repair services. To find them, look for r.Afi. ciaJ SMOG CHECK signs. Cr Jd< with your garage service. ga ; sta- tion, dealer or the Automot.'8 Club of Southern California. In 'ne )91. low Pages, look for srTlOf i~ tion seMces. Watch for Jds and competitive prices. Lists of ~~, also be seen at the Bureau of Automotive Repair o1Jic:es in program areas Cafffomta BurNU ·of Automottve Repetr 1 41 ~) 43'-1600 llOTlCI or IUSTlllG or CllmJTOIS Ut> or AUTOKUIC STAT TO TH£ DEBTOR, ITS CRED ITORS ANO OTHER PARTIES IN IMT£R£ST! An order for r elie f under 11 USC Chapt er 11 , hav1n9 been entered on a peti t ion f i led by (or a9a1n1t) t he above-named debtor on t h• above date , SAVE NOW ON THE INCREDIBLE TRS·Blr .MICRO COLOR COMPUTER llOTICI IS 811l.1Bf CJV'IUI T'8AT1 1. A 1'1eet 1n9 o f cred1 tor• pur1uant t o 11 use Sec. 34 1 l•I •h•i l ~held in Roo• 8311, U.S. Courthouse, 6SO Capitol Mal l , Sac ramento, Ca l1 forn1a on the above da t e a nd time. 2. The debtor •ha ll appeat 1n p.raon (or , If t ht' d t'ptor 11 a partne r1h1p, by • gener a l par tne r , o r i f the debtor 1• a cor pora tion, by 1t• preai dent or o t her e1ecut1ve o ff 1cerl at t he t1 ~• i nd p lac e apec 1f 1ed above f o r t he pu r pose of be1n9 eaam1ned . YOO ua "111Tltla llOT lPllZ> TUT: Tht' met"t1 n9 may be continued or ad)our ned f rom t i •• to t ime by not ice at the ~••t 1 n9, wi t hout f urther wr i t t e n notice t o c reditors . At the meet 1n9, the creditor• may f ile the 11 c l a ims , exa~1ne t he debtor, and t r 1nsact such otheq bu11ne•• a1 ~•Y ptope rly come belore th~ •••ting . Attendance by credi t or• a t the mee t 1n9 1• welcomed, bu t no t required . Al a reault of t he f ll1n9 of t he petition, cer t a in act• and proceedi ngs a9a i n1 t t he debtor and hll pro pe r ty are 1 t1yed •• provided In 11 USC Se c. )62(1 ). Un l••• t he Court e wtenda the time, any compla int to de termine th• d 1achar9eablllty of any debt pursuant to S2l lC) of t he Code •ha ll be fi l ed not l i t er than 60 days follow1n9 th• f l r lt date ••t for t he •••ting of cred i t o r s. The debtor haa f iled or will f tle a lis t of c reditor• a nd equity 1ecur1ty holder• pur sua nt t o l anktuptcy Rule 1007, Any c reditor hold1n9 • lis t ed cle 1• which is not listed ••dis puted , cont1n9ent, or · un l1q u1 dated •• t o amount, ••y but need not , f i le • proof o f cl a l ~ In thi s ca1e . Any credit or who de11 re1 to rel y on the lis t h•• t he re1pon1 1bl llt y of dete rim1n1n9 that he I• accurate l y l i s t ed . Creditor• whose cla 1•1 are not l11ted or whose cl a1 ~• are li s t ed ••di s puted, cont 1n9ent , or unl1qu1dat ed •• t o a moun t I nd who desi re to partlc1p•t• in t he c••• or s hare In any d 11 tr1but 1on •ul t f i le e proof or cl a im. A proof o f c l a l • m1y be f iled on or be fore Jun• 29 , 1914. A c~a 1• •y be f iled 'n t he OfflC• o f th• Cl••k of the l•nkruptcy Couc t, •008 1020 •, 6~0 Cepltol "111 , Sac ra~e nto, C•l1fo rn1a , 9 ~11 4 , on an o f f1 c 1•1 t o rr presc r i bed f or • p roof of cla1•. tnve lop•• conta 1n1 n9 cl•••• •u•t be c learly ••rked •cLAI"* end not contain other corr eapo~denee . PO•t ed : ro• THE cou•T •ICHA~ C. HtLTZ£L •ro insure pro~pt proceeaing, ~u•t bt di rec ted to Roo~ 10)8 Cat1 rornl •, 9~1 1 4 . 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A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES ANO OEAl.ERS ' t • Rent controls face challenge in Sacramento Few laws are more important to the I 0 million-pluJ Californians who hve in apartments than the rent controls which now govern most of the state's largest populallon centers. But few laws are under such constant attack. Because rent controls arc locally imposed, they come in many sizes and shapes. Some forbid rent in- creases when a tenant moves out. others say the sky's the hmit when an apartment is vacated. Some exempt new buildings from all controls. others exempt them only the first time they're rented. But the attacks on rent control all sound alike and all come from s1m1lar quarters. The ma1or complaint: Landlords lose money under rent control, especially under Laws that roll back rents to the level of a year or two before controls were adopted. And they are deprived of the income all other investors get when rents are based on what was charged historially rather than on the current value of their buildings. Taken together. according to builders and building owners. these two conditions mean a housing shortage is inevitable when rent controls are in effect over a long period. But the attacks on rent control have never succeeded. The one time de- velopers managed to get a rent control phaseout onto the statewide ballot - an 1980-theiriniuauvewashandtl) voted down. Now, however, their attack shows more promise than ever before. Two major anti-rent control balls are ahve in the state Legislature, both aim mg to cripple the ability of local governments and local ciuzens to make their own rent control de- cisions. Similar efforts were made dunng the mid-I 970s. the earl y ~ears of California rent controls. But Jeff) Brown was governor then. and there was far more S)mpath~ in high quarters for renters than there 1s today. So those attempts got nowhere. mostly because all sides knew the)' 'd be vetoed 1f they ever got out of the Legislature. But rent control. unlike reapportionment. was ne ver a stnct party-line issue. .\nd today's climate makes passage of at least one anti-rent control THOIAS ELIAS measure this year extremely likely. The best bet for passage 1s a bill by Dcmocrauc Assemblyman Richard Alatorre of East Los Angeles, which exempts all newly constructed units from local rent control laws. Alatorre's theory is that by passing a statewide exemption for new build- ings. developers who have held up projects for fear of new controls from fickle local governments aod local electorates will be reassured. Confi- dent that their units will exist in a perpetual free market, he hopes, these developers will accelerate the pace of building. One of the first areas to benefit: AJatorre's own district. where apartments arc often overcrowded m unincorporated areas subject to coun- ty rent controls. But the climate toward rent control is now becoming so negative, with Gov. Deukmejian clearly an oppo- nent. along with all his cabinet officers. that even with a Demo- crat ic-con trolled. mostly liberal Legislature. a much stronger law has ~ome chance of passage, too. This bill, by San Joaquin Valle) Democrat Jim Costa, would allow owners to charge rents calculated to ~ve them a set rate of return on their investment based on fair market value. This would allow rents to skyrocket when buildings change hands and new owners pay far higher prices than the old owners paid. Passage of Costa's bill would end the long depression in the resale value of apartment buildings. But at would also effectiveh end rent controls in California.· 1r 1t passes. expect either a referendum or an 1nitiat1ve 1n an cffon to overturn 11. For rent control as too strong a poliucal force to die quietly , no matter how strongly the governor and his top aides may dislike it. Tbomas El/as is • S11a ta Moaica-based columaist oa state issues. 9J2 lteci•oni~ YfllOW P'AGU SATEHITE ll~K. lr:tC . UNIVERSAL SATELLITI! , .. c. ltlOlt l'llWOMIAllCI IA flLUTI TWUWIMOltl\'tTIMI ••K"ANO ~ C~"' m_& ~ ....,._.,.,. ............. IATELUTITV AHIDlNTlAt. •"'1'11trA"'111£H'1#CHA/llNELI ~:. ~ • wrl'H rHI rOVCHM.teunOH \'' • MLI• -llt"OltrlHC -Oii TltllUrlOH ,' • ltlllO.,llrl.tL I COIWlilllfCIAL •DUALITY, LOW 'lflCI•. 'Air llltV/CI rn•AWOIWO AVA,LA•L• cu••T CAlllDI AGGl"ID I 441-0511 I •• HA•L.A •arAMOL -! C\ll*IJll & u.11 ,,..,__, -lfHklMltlal ~ -Ct>11do'1 -Hot•I• ' l eleeand ,.,vie:• COMM:ACIAl. WATCH aATIEL.UTll T.Y. -: AT IT8 •18T NOW AT • L.OW IXrOllT rtHCl8 I MHH ANTENNAI 888·3383 728-4708 We ••rvlce: • MICROCOMOUCTOll~ .WIDCllS .CHIPS , OtlOOOl BOMBA • TIUTHCRMAt rLAMBAI 555·1212 111 W Utll eT Hl.H J0010 EICH:tron c rtl 6 /upply Inc . •PAJITl•ACClalONCt• •AIClllt"Al•Tl'AMll9TOfll • MOCMAH ''"' D•TH ..CA,OUAIA••MAOltAVOI PHii.CO, ETC. ( 559-0981 I Eltclronlc Equipment l Suppli11-Dulars- Eltctrtnlc Eqvlpmt nl l Supplits-Dulm - HDMAN WCTIIONICS j _ (Cant'd\ 1 ConJ'dl Harmless bomb is perfect weapon President Rea~n says he's going to ask for a worldwide ban on the production, possession and use of chemical weapons. Right after announcing his proposal, the President said that since 1t"sgoing to take a long while before we're sure no one has any chemical weaponsorismakingany. we'll ha ve to keep some on hand ourselves. That's known as back to square one. It does seem as though. with all the world's technical know-how. some- one could invent the perfect weapon. one that could lead a country to a military victory without killing or hurtinganyone I've been thinkingabout the prob- lem. and while my suggestions may not be wonh anything, they're at least in the right direction. Here are I 0 ideas for new weapons: I. A new bomb which. when dropped. would give everyone for miles around a bad cold. No country could mount an offensive if they all had tocaU in sick. 2. Drop money. If we bought or printed as much money as a nuclear weapon costs us and dropped the cash in smaJI bills all over the Soviet Union. )OU know dam well it would take the Russian citizens' minds off ANDY Roo1n fighting us. They'd all rush to the stores to find something to spend it on. 3. The argument against money might be that a lot of our potential enemies don't have anything to spend money on. 0 . K., then. Drop them th e real thing from parachutes. Drop packages ofgounnet food. drop cameras with little parachutes to float them gently to the ground. Divert the enemy. Take their little red minds off war and get them concentrating on the material thingsoflife the way we do. We might even drop electncal appliances that don't really work and drive them crazy. 4. Drop video tape recorders with rerunsof"Dallas," "Three'sCom- pany" and "M.A.S.H." on them. 5. A concussion bomb that wouldn't brcakan)thingbutglass. It would break all the glass for males around. If it were dropped on Mos- cow. there would be no wrndows left in the Kremlin, no windshields in Russian cars and any Russian leader who wore glasses would't be able to see until he got a new pair. In Russia the war could be over by that time. 6. Have ha I fa dozen of the best newspapers in the United States translated and printed in Russian. Drop them in bundles on Russia every day so the Russian people could find out what's really going on in the world. Drop some Rupert Murdoch papers, too, just to confuse them. 7. Bombard enemy cities with Wonder Bread. 8. Broadcast Ii ve debates from Congress and feed them by satellite into Russia. No Russian soldier watching what happens on th e floor of the House ofRepresentatives or in the Senate would take this countr; seriously. 9. Sneak large amountsofbubbk gum. designer jeans and Michael Jackson records into Russia. IO. lt'salmost too horrible to mention. but I'd send the Democratic candidates in the primary elections to the Soviet Union for a six-month speech-making tour and bore the Russians to death Aady Rooo~y Is a syadlcat~ colomalst. The postman always rings three times I'm always fascinated by what comes in the mail. Indeed. afJ happen to be home around the time that the mailman comes, I find myself wall· mg, an almost unbearable excitement building. to see what he'll bring. I figured out a long time ago that a well and a rock can ha ve a definite beanng upon your heanngab1l1t). If you drop that rock down the well. the deeper the "ell. the more acute your heanng becomes. The longer 111ake'i the rod to hit bottom. the harder you listen. That's what happens 10 me around mailume. I find m)selfhstenmg "Ith much more intensity for the fam1l1ar "Clunk" of the dropped maalbo\ lad. Or even better. when I hear a stuffing sound and no clunk. Thal mean!> there's something BIG in there' My enjoyment 1'l 1ntcmificd b\ the fact that I ha"c thm· Jddn:s<,c<,- home. office and p () hm -lhU'i three ta mesas muth mJtl I'm surevou'n: f:1m1liar "'Ith the \tuffthat comes lo ;our home mall box. It's usualh rcktrl'd to as "Junk ma11'0 • a m1snomn 1fl l'\ er heard Olll'. Junk1!>worthk<.'> lnrntcrta1nmcn1 BILL HARVEY value alone. this stuffis priceless! "You may ALREADY HAVE WON!" "GRA ND PRIZE" - TRANS WORLD AIRLINES!" "NO! Not a mere FLIGHT on TWA. but the AIRLINE ITSELF!" ··FIRST PRIZE! FIVE Cadillacs and a GAS ST A TION!!" "SECONDPRIZE!THEplanet MARS!!" <\ nd on. and on. and on. Down to 691h pnze." 1.348.094 plastic whistles!" Then. in teeny tiny type. 1t 'Kl) s"Yourc hancesof wanning the grand pnzeareonc 1n I YO. 745. 987.274.209.65400 I. The ones that I CnJO} most are the ones that g1 vr you more than one cha nee to w1 n "ENCLOSED are your SEVENTEEN CHANCES to WIN!" Goody. That changes my chances for winning from one in a million to seventeen in seventeen million. Whooppee. Sometimes, when I'm in a dev1hsh mood. I remove all possible means of identifying me and send theentry back with a large order for whatever it is that they"re hustling. Or send an unsigned check. Or a non-existent Visa or Mastercharge number with too few or too many digits. My P.O. box is a lot offun too. Some time back, there was a large envelope in there that c9ntained water conservation gear. Flow restnc- tors for the shower. a large plastic bag to be filled '!Vith water and put in the toilet tank, that sort of stuff. Now, I'm as much for water conservation as the next guy, and I immediately installed the water sav- 1ngstuffthat came to our house, but I JUSt couldn't use the stuff that came 10 our P.O. box. It was far too bag 10 install in the tin) shower and 101kt that I keep in the box. Beside~. I have carefully computed the water utiliza- tion in our box as I /245.6991h of an acre-inch per year. and I really don't feel that flow restriction is ralled for Let 'em sue me. Apparently the guy who used to have It this post office box (three years ago) was quite a Casanova. I occasionally get letters addressed to him (Yes. afterthree years) that smell like a French Establishment of Nego- tiable Virtue and are covered with carmine lip prints..J'd really like to meet this guy. Cat1 you imagine a man who takes ladies out and then gives them a P.O. box number where they can reach him? And them still writing to him, three years later? Wow! A friend of mine used to own a business and his office mail took a decided tum towards the weird. He had been accepting, for his office of course. mail addressed to Ms. Costa Hypnos. His office's full name was Costa Mesa Hypnosis center. When mail camcaddresscdtoCosta Hyp- nos. he'd stand an the middle of th e room and yell "Listen up. it's for you!". and stan to read. There was an organization that apparently wanted 10 teach his office to become a successful writer. He thought he quashed that one by tak,.g the test (for his office. who had trouble typing) and sending 1t back. The letter that came back fairly glowed with praise. and insisted that his office was truly bursting with writing talent. Not only that. but for a mere$375. they'd teach his office how to make a handsome living through wnting. Hell. I'd like to know how to do that. His office began to consider a mid-life career change. It was tired of beingan office . His office was adamant, despite his constant re- minders that the writing profession is a bloody, dog-eat-dog field that can only lead to starvation. His office started to fight back. One day. he flicked the switch, and the li~ht wouldn't come on. Sometimes his key wouldn't fit. He finall y decided that he'd have to surrender 1f has office remembered the smoke a I arm. and how to operate at . I wonder how the\ determined that h1sofficcwasa Ms.? Columalst Biii Harvey llvn la HaatJ111toa Beacb. Western technology leaks to Sovlets through Japan Russians upgrade weapons systems with diverted and stolen equipment WA.SHINC1TON -The KGB has found Japan a n ch source of Western h1gh·lechnolog' products that can tx- turned to m1htal) adva ntagr b~ the Kremlin. Y ct Japanc<;e official\ arc unw1ll1ng 10 stop the massavl' lcakag" of tcchnolog)' -or even ac.Jm1t 1t'sgo1ng on. When confronted pnvately with the evidence, the) profess skept1 c1san that their tradmg benefits the c.;ovacts m1htarily since. they ~y. 1t invol\e5 only commercial products There have hct'n about three dOL('n documented casts of h1gh-1cch d1- vers1on by the Soviets through Japan Stn<% 1968. Bui that's onl~ lh<' l•P ol the ORANGE COAST DailyPilai iceberg. The ~uspceted cases of high-tech theft run into the hundred~. 'By legal and Illegal methods. th" ov1ets ha ve ooughl Japanese manu- facturing CQu1pmcnt and used it to build up their own microelectronics mdustry for m1htaf) purposes. The ov1et obJe~·t1"l' 1s to improve both the technolog) and producti vity of mdustnei. that have h1stonc.ally lagged b<'hmcl the Wesfs: m1cro- C'lectro01c". mal'hanc tools. auto- mation and specialty steel Technology a<.'qu1rcd from the Jap.'lne~ has enhanced 1he ov1ets' ground-based weapons systems and sohd·state c1rcu1tn for missiles and aircraft. according to mtelltgen~ H. L. Schwartz UI Pvb11"'4rr Chezy Oowabby fO•IOI tflO AIM!af\t 10 1"41! Publo"* !'I~ •-y l.tf I ,.,. ,..,., A '!O ...,,.., 1141~ ~I '°''" -"-"""'' C(Y•"""..,.. "' fl • l<,f,O ('.<Jll• M-I A ~l U lerry D. &peen M•NIQ!f10 f do I Of Frank Zlnl A&tOCllll• [d1IOf ' source~. The Soviets have obtained a satellttc nav1'3t1on system through Japanese trading firms. The Russians also used illegal means. such as 1ndustnaJ espionage and outnght theft. to evade U.S. and other Western export controls on products reachin,g Japan. In fact . there'sa large KGB force working out of Soviet diplomauc residences in Japan whose sole mission is hagh·tech diversion. Multiple transshipment (ship- ments to four. five or more dest1 - nauons) and creation of dumm} corporations arc two methods UStd by the KGB and profit·hunv> Japanese businessmen to f.CI around whatever restrictions lhctt •~. Sometimes the illicit trade is a mall-scale enterprise. as when Japanese fishennen win the pnvalcge of fish1na off islands claimed by the Soviets by mectmg KGB qents at ~a and slipping them everything from d1g1tal wat~·hes to microchips and 1nformat1on on U.S and Japanese military bases 01 PAT C H FROM EL SALVAOOR My rovtng reponer Jon Lee ndenon. has JUSt rttumcd from a foray into rtbel tcmtory He found the auemllas more edgy, mort hostile toward AmC'nc.ans. In the small town of El Tnunfo. he talk~ wtth gurmlla~ who had men- JACK ANDER SOI can-made M-16 automatic riOes slung over their shoulders. They were dressed 1n a b<'wllderina hod&epodge of c1v1han garb and cannibahLcd military unafonns. Most were peasant boys As Anderwn chatted with a sentry in the town's hot. squalid little pla~. an anny helicoP.ter clattered over· head. The gucmllas didn't scramble for cover. they seemed indifferent to the rnemy chopper. But the sentry blurted: .. We kno" Amencan pilots art flying the boml:>- ang missions against us. and so we're rcadr to fl.iht apmst the Amcnan~. too.' Anderson. who speaks nuent Spanish. prodded him cautiously Theaucmlla responded licrccl}' "We want to kill anngos' We're w auna for them''' In th(' b ttlt"·!iean:'d hill~ of north· cm San Miguel. my reporter was stopped b\ gucmllasouuide the town of Sc~n Tht IOCll .11.uenill:s ladcr said he had .. unbreakable" orders that "you get out of your car and stan walking in the direction you came from." This meant a long hike through rebel-infested hills to the nearest army-held town There was a good chance they would encounter trigger-happy patrols on both sides. They tned to appeal to higher authority, but they were told by the guerrillas that the radio had "gone dead.'' For more than an hour. there was a tense stand-off. Finally, they were allowed to go. POLITICAL NOTEBOOK: UouSt' Speaker Tip O'Neill told this story at a closed meeti"I of the Democratic whip . with the observation. "I as- sume you guys W1ll tcll th1s." It seems President Rcapn paid a courtc y call on O'Neill honly after the 1980 clec-t1on. howing off his anuque dtsk, O'Neill told the president 11 once belona.ed to Grover Clevcl nd. The new pttSident remarked: "I played him in the movies once " O'Neill correc1cd Rc~n: "No. Mr Pre'1dcnt. )OU pla)ed Grovu C1eveland Alexander the baseball pla)'CT " J•C't Ami nan IJ • •YDdlr••N tolaimhL ANDTROORT colamm.t RICHAID CoHEI Cob.en goes to lunch onus Tax deductions subsidize the nation's affluent WASHINGTON -Ata recen1 meeting with banlcers and home-builders in Texas, President Reagan mentioned the unmen-. tionable. Discussing efforts to s1m· pli fy the tax code, the President refused to rule out a change in the deduction home-owners now enjoy on their mortgage-interest payments. The next morning, major newspapers all but ignored the story. As well they should. Almost im- mediately, key members of Congress took the mortgage-interest deduction and draped an American nag over it. End it? Alter it? Noway. You mightas well be tallci ng about c.apping Old Faithful orsubdividingMount Ver- non into condominums-Cherry Tree Acres. The truth is I breathed a sigh of relief. Without the mortgage-interest deduction I would be a lot ~rer. But as long as we are deal in$ with terrible truths. yet another one as the fact that the mortgage-interest deduction is representativeofprec1sely what has thrown the federal budget so terribly out of whack: the growth of entitle- ment programs that benefit mostly theaffiuent. Probably the best-known of these 1s the mort$'i.ge-interestdeduction. The total bill in lost income to the Treasurycomesto$28 billion a year -halfofit from the wealthiest I 0 percent of households. After all, the more yo u borrow. the more you deduct. These figures can be found an an article by James Fallows an 1he Apnl 1ssueofthe Atlantic ma$'izine. His thesis 1s that the budget as in the red ($200 billion next year) not Just because we tax too little (the Reagan taxcuts)oralmost not atalJ(coP,Pr- ate taxes), but because we simp.,- spend too much keeping middJe-and upper-class people living in a manner to which Congress has gotten them aocuatomed. No cut in defenscexpen- ditUfescan possibly make up the diffen:nce. Fallows asks some good questions: Why shouJd everyone. including the filthy rich, get Social Security ben-efits~ Why should the government subsidize private air travel by either paying for or subsidizing private airports'? Why should civil servants be eligible for retirement at 55 and the military at 40and why should l,asa writer. be able to deduct as a business expense the costs ofbooks and magazines-many of which I would buy anyway? The answer. at least when it comes to social justice. is that there 1s no answer. That is espe<:ially the case since the Reagan administration's economic programs took effect. cut- ting benefits forthe poor while increasing their tax burden. But as Fallows points out, it's both sally and unfa1rto blame the entire budget mess on Reagan -his tax program or his defense buildup. Nell her political party has had the guts to say no to the middle and upper classes. For instance, forallthescreaming about the deficit. no one has seriously suggested doing something about mongage-mterest payments-hke putt mg a ceiling on thrm. After all. we arc not always talking about your average home-owner and the all but inalienable right of Americans to own their own home. We are also talking of people who own three or four homes. Why should the government subs1d1ze more 1han one of them? And as long as we are aslong questions, why should the govern- ment subsidize business lunches? A r«ent article about restaurant prices in New York reported that some meals now cost as much as S l 00 a person. The mtaurantcurs know what they're doing; They know most of their patrons arc on expcnSt accounts. In the end, wcallch1p an so some$ 500,QOO..a-ycar exccuti vc (or some more modestly paid columnisl) can e..at forfrtt. Tryexplainina that to someone who has had their food stamp reduced in th~ name of au tenty. Thcscerecomphcated 1 suesand there is.. as with most things, another ide to the story. (What, for instance, would happen to the hous1na 1ndust.ry ifit were nouubs1diu<I by the JOvemmcnt?) But while you'rt mull- ing that over. I'm foina to lunch. I wiU h1 .. csomethinan1cc, ma)'bea tcmf~ salad nd colTce. rm tcPil\ you lhat bccausr you h.avea rlJht to know AOcrall. )·ou'regoingto pa)' fortl. ltlrbnl Co.ff.a I•• l>Ml~rftl col11D11l1t. cl "'., ' BACKTALK Rebecca Holden le honor., ..... ,. of the tourtat mice•, Unlverul CllJ. Ill. Are you in good runningQrder • With today's------------- column, we bcjin a series on physical fit- ness. Each week I will preM'.Dt some startl- ing information re-CuY ~{s~~ng h~man fit-ROTHEIBEIG Did you know••••••••••••• that of the 20 million people in this country who consider themselves to be runners, 68 percent actually run less than 10 miles per week. Only 37 percentjQJ, a few times per year. A recent survey by the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports reported that approximately 48 percent of adult Americans do not participate in any form of exercise, yet S1 percent of those questioned believed they were getting more than enough physical exercise. Another survey found that only )3 percent of adults who own running shoes actually run. . These statistic~ underscore the tact that we are a Working in pairs, 'it takes as many as 200 to do a simple nation of non-exercisers. . . . task like putting a box on a shelf. Your musdcs make up Many ~pie. seem to th!nk ~bat merely dressma. the 40-4S percent of your body wciaht. part and !~king hke an e.xerc1ser 1s halft~e bat~e: Believe Your lungs are filters which take oxygen out of the air. me, .wean~g a great looku~g warm up suit wont improve In breathing. you use almost 100 ~alJons of oxygen a day. the mtcgnty of yo.ur card1o~ascular system nor enh~nce 6-The centraJ nervous system ongmates in the brain and your musculature 1fyo~ don t get out t~ere and exercise. ""Extends through the spinal column, reaching every ma' or The. hu.man ~Y IS, a super mach1~e., Here arc a few part of the body. Three million impulses arc generat~ in facts _that m1&ht pve you a better apprcc1atton of your o~n the nervous system every second. physical wclf bemg and understanding why a daily routine . . of exercises is so important. regardless of your age. T~erc is no d~ubt about tt -the huma~ body 1~ a Your hean is the most efficient pump in existence for compltcated machine. The benefits ~fan actJve exercise its size. beating approximately 1S times in a minute or 40 program arc twofold. Reaular exercise makes. the heart. million times a year. lungs, muscul.ar and vascular systems function better. During one day. the heart supplies enough energy to Regular exer~1se also makes you feel bett~r. Remember. lift six tractor trailers off the ground. regular exercise ~duces the energy requirement of the At the rate of2'h gallons of blood per hour, your heart heart m.µscle . This con~pt can be co~pared to that of a in one year pumps enough blood to fill a two-inch pipeline pro~rly tuned car geumg more miles to a gallon of running coast to coast. gasoline. There are more than 600 muscles in your body. It is difficult for the ayerage person to do 100 consecutive situps or SO pusbups, yet w wortd ruoftlllbr tbete activities arc approximately 27,000 Md ,,., respectively. How many ofthete can you do, if'•Y' Don't be discouraged, but if you arc not satidied Widl your present level of physical fit.ne5S, I cncouraec ,oa IO continue rcadina this column. I will attempt to molivate you to evaluate your fitness level and to improve ,..- health by engaging ifl<. some form of physical llC:li~· Remember. always consult your family physician t.lllil beginning any exercise program. ln our next column -we will aive you a home ft.- examination for you and your family to lelt lcv• fit muscular tone. • • • Recently, the Daily Pilot received a responte IO dlil column in a letter to the editor from a Newport._ pediatrician, Steven Koffler, M.D., who ofl'cm1 ~ valuable information regarding "scoliosis"'. ·Living_past 100 a challenge 1 thaok Dr. Komer for bis comments and bave ~ him by letter my response to his .. pertinent ditllea". Essentially, it was made clear that spinal manipulalioll it.a very vaJuable treatment for a patient with scoliOlis Wio also suffen from beck pain in a p-cat number of ~ There are many b!shlY respected orthopedic IUf'ICOM iD this country and England who adv<>Cf te spinal m•oi,... lation for many back conditions, includina scolioei&. The use of spinal manipulation bas little to do witb actually strai&htening a spinaJ "deformity" such u a structural scoliosis. This type of treatment is. bowtvcr. appropriate for inducing mobility into the spinal column and relieving the patient's discomfon. But dieting helps, so does $39,000 a year for vitamins By AMERICAN HEALTH MAGAZINE SERVICE According to legend, the Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon died at 61 after vainly searching Aorida for the Fountain of Youth. Now, som~ean lmr,toot:ingfor perpetual youth around Miami seems like a bad joke. But the search goes on -only now it's centered near California's La Brea tar pits. Los Angeles has produced new guidebooks to a life span of 120 to lSO years, give or take. "Life Extension," by Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw, stayed on the New York Times' best·seller list from August l 982 thro ugh last April Fools' Day. Now Warner Books has just released a sequel, ''The Life Extension Compa- nion." The other guru of longevity is Dr. Roy Walford, a professor of pathology at UCLA medicaJ school. His book "Maximum Life Span.'' was publicized in newspapers and magazines around the country. A sequel, "The 120-Year Diet and Nutrition Plan," is in the works. Watford has even founded a company called Gerontix-"Natural Products From the World's Most Trusted Geron- tologists"-to market vitamin and mineral formulas. The longest human life span on record, a real rarity, is 1 18 yean. To push laue numbcn of people past about the age of 100 wouJd take an assault on the process of aging itself. But that's what the life extenders hope to achieve. Walford. S9, has chosen an ascetic route. He has built on experiments, eoin~ back nearly so years. that put rats and mice on a stnct diet. Limit an animal to a fraction of what it normally cats-or make it fast a few days a week-and it may live 1.600 days instead of 1,000. Walford has shown that such a diet slows the rate at which a rafs immune system deteriorates. He and some other scientists theorize that this immune decay is a major force in aging. But in "Maximum Life Span." Walford goes further. PAPARAZZI ---=r----'--"--- HHYCfleet well dressed for openers By ANN CONWAY ~ .... c.., .... ndel .. "Dressed" was the watchword on the Huntington Harbour Yacht Club's opening day. Yachts were freshly polished, painted. varnished and .. dressed" with rainbows of triangular signal flags. Not to be outdone by their pleasure craft. members adopted the naval sartonal splendor, donning crisp white slacks, handsome, Navy blue blaz.ers-plus gold-braided captains' for officers and former commodores. "Opening day" isa tradition begun in colder climates where yacht clubs were closed during the winter months. Before the opening ceremony, the club conducted its annual Concoursd~elegance (contest of elcganceJwhcrc boats were Judged by a special committee headed by Jack Gro11mu. Deanna and Dick A11lby'1 "Callistro ... a GulfStar SO which took the ··best overall" trophy. First place went to Uadaand PaolSacklD'a··LiodaEugenia.'' a Tollycraft 48. Floreace and P~ Arctero captured second place with their .. Hi-Bid 11,"a Pacemaker 48. During a "passing in review" salute to officers, yachts carefully moved past DeJlJll1 Brown'• "Summerwind" ~nd received hand salutes from officers aboard and a booming saJute from officiaJ cannoneer Jerry Olaoa if a staff commodore was aboard the review craft. A parade through Huntington Harbour followed. markina the club's only formal appearance during the year. Back at the clubhouse, outgoing commodore, Tom Loa.Pila and incoming commodore, Plall LtlptoD presided over rededication of the facility(newly expanded with a design by staff commodore Doa Bartfelder). M ore than 300 members and guests finished off the day with a luncheon, dancing and conversation about the club's 1984 season. In addition to Lupton, officers arc Gar Mattllew1, vice commodore; Cece Hllbbanl, rear commodore; Bill WUaoa, fleet captain; and Hal Fells, port captain. Those interested in club membcnhip (liVlna in the Hatbour area is not a requirement) should contact Nena Smltllat 846-9687. • • • The reocnt House ofOesian sponsored by the Newpon Harbor Jaycees came toaarand finale with a special day honorina the d~f. Proceeds went to the Sian Writer Newspaper, the locaJ pubhcation which is the first in the world to offer news in written sign tanauqeuwell as Enalish. Present were movie, staaeand TV actorWUUam Sdaallert, Paala Barnc .... lt·O.U, who conducted tours in sian lanauaae and Krtt Beffmu, president of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, Oranac Coast. whose members ttrved u hastesses for the special day afT'lnacd by d iJner J .. anwa,prcsidcntoftheSouthCoasteh.ptcrofthe Nauonal Home Fashion league. .. Information is aJready available to enable one to li ve to be more than 120 if he be~ns early enough and adheres religiously to a lifelong regime of dietary restriction," he writes. Walford himself. at S-feet-8 and 142 pounds, eats about 2.100 caJories of nutritionally ··superb" food five days a week and drinks water the other two. What evidence is there that this sort of routine will work for people as well as rats? Really none. Professor Edward Masoro. chairman of the physiol- ogydepamnenranhe University of Texas HeaJth Science Center in San Antonio, doesn't believe any diet can extend human life to 120 and beyond. lf therc were one, "it would have been stumbled on already." Walford's diet may appeal to some, but many scientists are afraid that fasting and cutting calorics will just make their lives feel longer. That's why they have turned for solace to "Life Extension: A PracticaJ Scientific Approach" (Warner, 1982) by Pearson and Shaw. Unlike Walford, they imply that you can live to a healthy 140 without deprivation. They allow lots of butter, cream and eggs, and require virtually no exercise. The core of their 858-page tome is a ''Current Personal Life Extension Formula"-a total of roughly four ounces a day of vitamins. amino acids, minerals. food additives and drugs. Asked their opinion of the book, researchers contacted by American Health were unaware it exists. said they'd only seen references to it or. in one case. admitted to receiving a copy and chucking it. But when asked about its claims, these scientists are cautious in their crit1c1sm. Pearson and Shaw do generally write about respectable lines of research, even if they interpret the data freely. But there is the question of price. Pearson and Shaw say they take 33 daily vitamins. minerals, food a~itives and drugs -plus "antacids as required ... Assuming that Pearson. now 40ish. li ves another 100 years, how much will n cost" Dr. William Bennett, editor of The Harvard Medical School Health Letter, visited a local health-food store and drugstore and obtained prices for. all but four ~inor ingredients. He ignored these and discounted the pnce of °"' ,....-..,_. c...... Outeotna commodore Tom Loaablln and wife Marcia ehare a moment (top) at openiDC day ceremonle. with Don Bartfelder. Below, Oraaie County Board of Sapenl9on cbalr· man llarrtett Wieder and ber baaband In lleten to new commodore Phil Lapton. the rest by SO percent. assuming he could save by buying in bulk. Bennett learned it would cost $64 a day to duplicate Pearson's intaJce-orS2.337,600between 40and 140. But statistics show that at 40 he could expect to live another 40 years anyway, so he would only add 60 years. That comes to $39,000 for each extra year (in 1984 dollars) ifhe makes it. . Will it par off? Right now, no one is doing a scientific test of this regimen. The only "experiment" is being done on Pearson and Shaw themselves-and who will wait to learn whether they make it past 100? .... ~WhoWOlilhave~--of ~lpopr--•(HOL.a). whlct\ provtdepnMC> tlan ....... hW't dl11111. ttwn WOl'Mn who -• home: ,.. • ._..•I*. or~ aplMt, C8nerwheneethe .... ~of older peopte ltW'O .aone. ,_Milt Who May on ttw fob after ege 92 tend to M....,.thenwtyredl111. ... The lof'9S ...... d*y """"*"'°.en aftiilr tmrt Uv-Y· the more llkety ...... become .....,,....., ...... ,,... ~ .. tteok victtrna who ~ down their ._ 1tand a better cnanoe °' 1UrYtva1 then thoee wno tuOGUmb to anxiety. As it was explained to Dr. Koffler, our primary concern is for the patients' health and in aood cooscieDcc, only those patients whom we sin~rely believe we can help are accepted. Most chiropractors uodcntand their role iD the management of scoliosis and arc more than willini to cooperate with an orthopedic surgeon or pediatrician foe the benefit of the patient. _ Dr. Cary H. Rothenberg, a Huntington BeadJ chiropractor, is host of "Backtalk." a weekly health mow on cable Channel JO, Tuesdays at 7 p.m. n... ... butthe latMt In along tine of obwvatioM ttw 1mmune., ... "· dllrMM•aung that how you • .., about you....n an.eta tt mer be a b'9 t1rne .,_,,. ~ ..._ a ~ ~ welt-being. RMMrdw• now recognta com1•••• 1**n of IM Mlnd'a .nilCt on tM bOCI;. M thee a .... m purpoee.. .a ~ outloole and tbe tblllllUdllalmcMn: .. _..._.. lltlW,_..,..., ~ofbetnCJln conJl'()tofOM'I .. rMy .. Pf'9VW't .,,.led In camlMlllJng ....... 1 ,; HELP YouRSELF --.-......~---~ SWINGERS' STATS ARE DROPPING Maybe n's the ------------ threat of herpes or maybe ifs just chang- ing um~s. For v. hat- ever reasons. the novclt) of quick and easy sex has begun to wear off. l.a101 Ai.w1 More \\Omen -•••••••••••-and men -are "'ant- ing rcla11onsh1p that include emottonal honest}. tender- ness. laughter. companionship. friendship ... and sex. The troubLc'is that too man) singles are sttll afraid to open)) discuss their intimate necds . ...At least, there &R." those who ha'e begun to ~1etl) identify them The unattached 101n 6'1\'ers 1n d1scusst0g their aerobic feats and marathon runs. New fnends often brag to each other about ph) s1cal prowess and promote the wholesome. healthier and hohs11c attitudes of our time. 1 A high premium 1s placed on spontane1t). ano for most self-defined .. swing10g smgles.." ch~ 1s seen as a de 1rable state E'cept when tt comes to SC"< and sociaJ games. It's still macho to seem not to care. even when you rcall) do While bcha' 1or hasn't changed much )Cl. attitudes have Jn 1 Q84. •Most men "alue their ttme spent with a v.oman \\Ibo can be a fnend rather than with one who JUSt offers sauaJ release. •Most men do not wish to have sex wt th a woman cm a first date 1f the) feel that there is potenual for a raJ relationship with her. •Most men are prudes when 1t comes to the "'omCD they love. •Most men will chmanate the poss1b1ht) of a siJnificant rclat1onsh1p with any woman who 1s sexually too easy. •Most men feel obhgated to attempt to have te c:arty on 1n a rclat1onsh1p for fear ofbema uspea • Mpst men cnJOY when a 'NOman ttel~ 50C11lly by bu)1ng theater ttcket or rookJna a meal. •Most men enJOY women who do mte""tin& i.hiop with their lives •Most men hkc women who laugh cas1I) •Most men apprcclatc 'NOmcn who can lake ~ of themselves 4.nd most women att confused ~~ tbtj ~ mixed m~ from men. v.1'o in thJ U"IH\ 1uona1 time may say or do one thins and man another. The"' ts ruson foropumwn. When attitudes ._. behavior 1s usually not far behind Dr ~ton 1 • ps-..cl>olc,.JJI •nd nwn.w,t: coutUtloi • Coron• dtT M11 ~ddrrss an1· questions to Lind.I • Ph D. c/o D:v/\ Ptlot. P 0 Bo1 I 60. Cosu MNa 9 • 81 Orange Cout DAILY ptLOT/Tueeday, Aprtl 17, 1984 Few learning disabilities medically related Emotions, home environment also contribute Qu~tions about childhood le.tm- i1t1 disabilities are answered by Marc A. Lerner, M.D., associ•te professor in rbe UC Irvine Col/e,e of Medi-cine's Department of Pediauics. • • • Q. My $-year-old IOD •• bavlD1 .Uflettlty leaniQ1 to write. He also &eDC11 to ml1beMve lD cla11. Could be be ltyperactlve? Will medication laelp! A. About 5 to 10 percent of children have some k.md ofleaminadisability. However. only a small percentaJO of these cases att due to tradjuonal medical disordcn. Home environ· ment. school situation, emotional make-up and innate abllity also contribute to one's intelJectuaJ and social maturity. To determine the extent and nature of your son's problem, I suggest you bcain by discussing these issues wi th your child's teacher. and then consulting your family physician. If your child is indeed experiencing an attention deficit with h~r­ activity, medication may be cffecttve, as research suggests a ncurochemical baSis for these symptoms. However. it's very imponnat to evaluate a drua's effect on function as well as behavior. There arc risks to merely ledatina a hyperactive child, particu· tarly if attendinl skills and per- formance are not enhanced. Leaming disabilities are often a reflection of altered processing. In some people, ocnain sections of the brain simply don't ope.rate the way they do in the aeneral population. Dyslexia. a common re•ding dis- order. is a good eumplc of such a condition. Because medication gen-erally will not help this kind of problem, special education tech- niques are often required. ht addition, what we call "bypass strategies" arc often helpful. This means teaching the child to use an Loving hands not appreciated 1 turned lhe page ------------of a leading magazine recent!) and m) heart skipped a beat. There in full glorious bunercup yellow were 12 crocheted pieces for ERMA Bo11ECK )O Ur bathroom lllllllllllllllllllllll• The re \\a s a crocheled cover for the toilet seat and the tank. a contour ru~. an oval rug for use in front of the bowl, a cover for the toilet tissue and a tie-back for the shower cunain. There were also crocheted covers for the bar of soap. the nose ussue. cleanser can. facial 11ssue and a little hat to decorate the wal l. I pra} m) Aunt Mae will not read the article and crochet herself blind by next Christmas. Don't bother to wnte and tell me that gifts made from the heart are the most beautiful gifts one can receive or that I am a pile of wonhlcss slime who doesn't deserve to be remembered in such a personal way. Don't )'Ou think I know that and feel rotten enough about 1t'.1 It's JUSt that I ha' e a whole house full of gifts from -'\unt Mae's hcan alread). Aunt Mae lea,es nothing undressed . There 1s a Mexican serape and 10-gallon hat over m~ tabasco sauce. E'ery bottle on our bar 1s dressed like a poodle. There's a costume for every doorknob for everr season beginning with a crocheted valentine and ending wtlh a Santa Claus. There are crocheted coasters. afghans. pillows. tablecloths. sachet holders. lampshades. bookmarks, chairback doilies. placemats, and a cover for the phone book. Poor Aunt Mac succumbed to the talents ol her nimble fingers )ears ago. And "'ho among us h_as not at o.ne time or another nearly drowned 1n our handiwork? Wtlh me. 1t was a knitting class I joined back in 1973. By 1974, everyone who nodded to me within a 2()()..~ile radius had a pair of knitted one-!.1ze-fits-all bedroom sltppers. I was a woman possessed. With my sister-in-law. it was seashells. She moved to a Florida beach a couple of years ago and worked the beach like a mine sweeper. Shells became her life. Christmas ornaments. mirrors. lamps. The last time I walked the beach with her. she only picked up two shells. thought about it. then discarded one. She's recovering. They tell me amateur painters are the same way. At first, they fill up their own walls with their t~lents. The.n when they run out of space, they stan passing out their paintings ltke senior class pictures. I know Aunt Mae will read this. 1 will understand 1f she crochets me a noose ... in buttercup yellow. allernate approach to the problem. for eumpTe, your son's writina difficulties may be bypassed by tcachlna him to type or use dictation. DiO'trenr parts of the brain are involved in 'these alternate functions. Finally, you.r child may be slow m maturation or aeneral learning. We all learn at different rates. Tbe public school curriculum is ·set ll rhe ~led ··nonnal" level, and some children will necessarily suffer as a result. Children who experience a broad maturational lag may benefit from being held back prior to the stan of first grade. This allows intellectual and social capacities to mature. Your phvsician and oublic school officials should be able to offer auidance. • • • Q, My cklld l• cvreaU,y oa me4.l· cau. fer QJieracth1ty. l 'm afral4 w1 will 1ea• .. 1 de,eadnce oa drqa. WUt an th daqen't A. Early studies show no arcatcr incidence of drug addiction amona medicated hyperactives than amona the acneral population. This may be due to the fact that pleasure reinforce- ment experienced by adults who abuse stimulant drugs is not ex- perienced by children. Our hope is that all of the therapies for the hyperactive child -including medication, behavioral and counsel- ing sup{>OrtS -will help diminish the frustrations these children feel and to allow for a positive selfimage to grow. When a chjfd is able to aer reinfon» ment from positive be6avior, he or ahe may be lea likely to tum to drup for escape. • • • Q. ta ti.ere a eater ta Oraqe Couty for evaludq u4 tnadat c~ wttl 1nndoa ud leara1aa deficit•' A. UCl's Dr. James Swanson bas been conductinajust such a program for the pa.st several yearJ. It's ~ed as one of the best of its kind in the country. This year, he's been granted his first permanent facility, one that will allow him to work with up to 60 chidren and their parents at a time. For more information on this program, telephone 9S7-SS36. **~ "Diii M Fot ..._,. (1911) Angle Dlcklnaon, Ct1r11topt11r Plummer. CJ) PAPER CHA8E: M l8XJND YW Crowning moment Pioneer mo'rie actreu Lillian Glab recel•ea the American Film lnatltut e Life Achle•e- ment Award ln a apeclal telecut ton!Cbt at 9 on CBS, Channel 2 . Major networks losing viewers By FRED ROTHENBERG NEW YORK -Even with three mimscnes and the Winter Olympics, the commercial networks' ratings were down for the imponant February sweeps month. Surprisingly, the beneficiary was not pay-cable as much as basic cable services and independeot commercial stations. The slippage continues a gradual defection of network audiences to cable that began several years ago and was only temporarily halted in early 1983 by huge ratings for "Winds of War," "The Thom Birds" and the "M-A-S-H" finale. "The decline is consistent with cable growth (now 40 percent of aJI TV homes),·· said David Pohrack. CBS' vice president for research. "It's not a dramatic reduction, although ifs certain I) higher than we would have liked." Just•6.95 and the choice is yours. closepb Weinberger M.D. The audience fluctuations mean "the concept of loyalty to the networks is dissipating." said Seth Abraham. senior vice president for program operations at Home Box Office, the No. I pay-<:able network. "The loyalty now is to the program, to the title:· According to the A.C. Nielsen Co., the commercial networks attracted 5 percent fewer viewers in February than they did one year ago. The 1984 combined pnme-time rating was 52.6. well off the 55. 7 a year ago and even lower than 52. 9 in February 1982 . k11.thl ""''· ~l11•r1 \ndr,...011', funnu' l ~ ( hrnl<" li1p ~1rlnin or_ L' ~ ( ·h11111 I 1 rl\ .11...1 'lr:ik d1nnen.. '~" 1•.l 111mp lC'll', lilrt' jll\I ~> 1,1, Offer itond Sunday throu~h rhunJay only. .111111 our fu 1111h (11r Fn,tlr dinner. \\ c'n: lnul.inl! f11 n\ :trd tu wn rnl! you. Ge neral Medicine Has the Pleasure to Announce the Opening of his Practice April 16, 1984 at Park Lido Medical Balldlng Hours by appointment 650-0972 351 Hospital Rd. Suite 411 650·0973 ( ·------------- ®MOYIE •• .,. "Some l(hl Of Hero" ( 1982) Rldwd Pryot, Metoot Kidder. -1M- • Cl) MOClOUD -12:50- (C)MOW *** "Bed Boyt" (1812) s.. Pim. Aini SlntoN. -12:11-- Cl)MOW .. "Rone" (1980) Fiona RlctiftlOlld, MilonyStell -1:00- .\ rating reflects the percentage of the nation's 83.8 million TV homes watching during any pnme-ume minute. Ratings are crucial to stations in sweeps months. when audience levels are exhausti vely sampled to determine advertising rates for succeeding months. Poltrack said that this year's February specials couldn't match the 1983 blockbusters: eight nights of .. The Winds of War" and the concluding episode of "M-A-~-tf." the hlghest-ratcd program ever. Poltrack said that ABC's two-week coverage of the 1984 Winter Ol ympics did not do well. while the miniseries "Celebrity." "Master oft he Game" and "Lace" did better than series programming but were far less successful than "Winds of War." The networks still say min1senes. scnes programming and made-for-TV mo"ics arc the best responses to pay-eable's thcatntal films. CBS' three-part "George Washington" is on this week. In May. another sweeps month. ABC and NBC each will broadcast two miniseries -"The Last Days of Pompeii'' and "Mystic Warrior" on ABC. "The First Olympics" and "V" on NBC. The networks' decline also applied to January and March. The average three-network primc·time rating for t 984's first quarter was 50.6. One year ago, it was 52.8. me,aning ABC. CBS and NBC were attracting 4 percent fewer viewers. HBO. with 13.S million subscribers. also lost audiences, droppina 10 percent 1n prime time from Feoruary 1983 to February 1984. Nielsen's nuing5 for the independent commercial stations (non-network, non.cable) sncruscd from a 7.9 rating one year ago to an 8.9. Pay cable went up slightly. from 3.3 to 3.5. which likely meant inCfe&SCS for howt1mc-The Movie Channel, which had ··Aashdancc" m February (HBO did not), and the pay-sports channels Ratinas for public TV stayed the same -2.5. Buie cable, which carries commercial·supportcd ~rviccs that don't require extra fees from subscribers. had an averaae pnme--rime increase ftom 2.1 to 3.0. Those serv1~ inc:ludc;:,MTV, ESPN. Cable News Network. USA Network.. the Chrisuan Broadcastina Network, the Nashvtllc Network and Llfctsmc. "Tbc basic--cab~ inettUC ss sprud out over so man) services that you can't pm~ant il." said Wilham R Behann~ a pokcsman for tdSC1\.. Only rettnrl y, HBO ba.t released pcaal Nielsen reports to answer network faiu.res showina that HBO'' ratings had declined. HBO Sl)S conventional ratinaa only tell half 1hc story. A, a pay service, aud,cncc satuftlction alw 1 important. unhapp\ v1ewcn will c:an~I UBO Juat another China tomUt · Ellabetb Taylor aclmlree tJae .cenery atop the Great Wall of Cbl.Da wblle ber flance, lllWll• ,..,_.,.,,, •CGITAMl.U £-T- C-l).w"' tlt"50 7$1 .. lli •WlWIM •CGITAmM aiw E-S-51151111 •IA-~O...-[ __ ,_ lolllt'-5-o ••·Jll5 '31 3601 "1.4mJ 11(),..._.AiCCVTW.O,-OA.,. .. _ ........ ll_•f •NaDrnOIN~ A PflRTllM.~,, ......:=:c::~ I .. __ -. NOW PLAYING llllA -.----IMM llrea l'lalJ s&-~ l*TAmA Edwl(lllllltu M-902S ~ 1)4.256) ·-_...,. °"""' l3M170 cmlaMllo\ Ed'watds llnslCll s.).7'41 ~-YMm flmllyku 1113-1307 -·-·Ill ~an.m.w. .1 ... , ______ , G¥.X§:n?KE TARZAN LORD OF THE APES -"~O '• \II 4• UUEl•639 8770 tmll SSI 06~~ SYUfY SIAOIUM Of! tr~ COWARDS WOOOBRIOGI HU 990 4G 'I llSSIH YIEJO 8JO 1>'1-. U~ MOVlfS 4 I OWAR!JS VIUO IWIN IUlU 'Alll X 'I I' •OHICf 6J• ,'',' ~·AClflC s l INC.OI N (I~ 1~. ,yurv CoNfOOMI •com •m ~4b wur111Sm • -PWARfl(, CINI MA I OWAPOC. l fNI M~ 1•,1 • msumo 111 oom srmo UAIEll 639'8770 SYUFY ST~ DR~ •.mu~ 11U11 SlMUt CISTA IW 751-4184 EDWARDS TOWN CENTER SD rw1 '! m!Cl & MlOll ..... 49$-6220 EOWAltOS lllSSION YU> MAU S D M TO CllOWll VM.U Y lllfllT IUCI ~-0760 EDWAllOS 1£WPORT " lltlll'Oll coma -634-2553 SYUFY CITY CENTER 3'01 lll('llC>"lrn M ...,._m 891-3935 EDWARDS CINEMA WCSl 11($1WISlll & CIOUP Wl$1 NU 529-5339 MANN 8'l£A PW.A ~m • p~·s II WAY 39 OR.ft 891-3693 a.o •~ IOllTl4 01 u m Victor Lana. ad.Jut.a bJa camera eetting. Taylor and Lana are tourtnc Asta. HUNTINGTON HACH Ecr-1ros tu1lw1QIOn c.netm 8"41-0388 IU·ItjMA\i ~SW' OllM8E Paoftt s ()3nQe Onvt· In 63'-9361 COITA MUA El TOM 0"•~Cf W£1TMIQTUI Edwws Bnstol EOWJIOS SaooleDK< Liii C.ly (,•If " Pacilic s Ho·Wly 39 ~7W 581 5880 63A J911 On.. In 891 3693 COITAMUA (ClWJIOSCintlNCenlef 979 •141 ~ACCUllO•OA•...SloOO~ "IT MADE ME LAUGH I 'ANIMAL HOUSE' WALKS THE BEAT!" .k#•I ""'"I 1.<lflll \IOH"'" \\IU<l<A \IK 1' NOW SHOWING UUOI 879-9850 lJ llAIU (213)691 0633 PACIFIC'S ANAHEIM DR·IN AMC rASHIQH SQUARE nu m 5339 11ss1H Yl£Jt m mo MAHN BR£A [OW. MISSION VIEJO MAU CISTI llSA 751 4184 GUICE 634 2553 EOWAAOS TOWN CENTER svurv CIHEOOME U TOIO 581 5880 WESTllHTU 89S 5333 EDWARDS SAOOUBACI\ UA WCSTMINSlER TWIN WESTlllSTH 891 3693 PAClrlC'S HIWAY 39 OR IN LUXURY THERTRES 1st 2 Matinee Showings Only $2.75 Unless Noted s •3t.t3er•Xutl6l63~ 25511~~.) FOR Funt EXCITEmEnTI V1s1tOur ... Rick SprlntfletcS 11!1) I t ·\f ~ ) TC ) I K >I l ) 12:10 2:10 4:10 •:10 1:10 & 10:10 '2110 2:30 4 :45 7:10 t :2S Al 12:05 2 :30 5:05 7:40 & 10:05 GREYSTOKE Al ~~~o~ "" llw'l••• 2 40 5 .ltO TARZAN I)\ 1·00 • ...... ., •• '"'"'" . 10:30 s Audemy Awards ('t(~NST 3,2o 7 :40 7itJM r1 am 2:ao1 :::: AL ~oouooae ·o _...,,. 7:40 6 ( .. 0) I :20 ~dANM 10101 8 1 :40 10:00 i3JkUJa)ljsi2)61~ 2ss1 /~T~) . ~.~:~ 1 .. 5~ .. STADIUm [)r.vn1n a W~lt ll1•MY --1\TE•s DAAoon a "lut Trot1 (f'Ot Ctllld .. ,IHI UPntE CPJll( II Alto St1owlt1t Scerfac• (Ill) ""'' ~ootlOOM (f'O) 639 8770/"'rr!'&.7: ~s-:6~ "1•111' •ualnHI f"I ,..,,. Tl\e Toy , .. 0) Orh,t•ll\I Optll •·20 w .. tt•fl•• I ..... WHllllltl\ll * Ch1ldten lJnd1t1 1~ f:RU: UnlP\\ No1~ 'Against All Odds ' tops the chart By T~e Atsociated Press The following arc Billboard's hot record hits as the)' appear in this week's issue of Billboard magazine. Copyright 1984, Billboard Publications. Inc. Reprinted with permission. HOT SING~ 1." Against All Odds" Phil Collins (Atlantic) 2."Footloose" Kenny Loggjns (Columbia) 3."Hello" Lionel Richie (Motown) 4.·'Hold Me Now" Thompson Twins (Arista) 5."Miss Me Blind" Culture Club (ViJlin-Epic) 6."Automatic" Pointer Sisters (Planet) 7."Somebody's Watching Me" Rockwell (Motown) 8."Love Somebody" Rick Springfield (RCA) 9."Herc Comes the Rain Again" Eurythmics (RCA) 10."They Don't.Know" Tracey Ullman (MCA) I L"You Might Think" The Cars (Elektra) 12 ... Adult Education" Daryl Hall & John Oates (RCA) 13."To All the Girls I've Loved Before'' JuJio Iglesias & Willie Nelson (Columbia) 14."Jump" Van Halen (Warner Bros.) 15."Eat It" Weird Al Yankovic (Rock'N'Roll) 16. ·•Girls" Dwight Twilley (EMf-America) 17."Girls Just Want to Have Fun" Cyndi Lauper (Ponrait) 18."Tonight" Kool & The Gang (De-Lite) 19."Don't Answer Mc" Alan Parsons Project (Arista) 20. "Head Over Heals" The Go Go's (l.R.S.) TOPLPS l:"Footloose' Soundtrack" (Columbia) 2." 1984" Van Halen (Warner Bros.) 3:'Thriller" Michael Jackson (Epic) From the first laugh. you71 be hooked/ • AaA•ll• cetTA •UA ........... UAC- J1H4U !.40·0514 •IHA fHITMI VAUlY ua.._.... ~'--...., ttO 4022 llt-1 soo •CftlA •UA lftlll .....,.. c...... C..t• EMern w......,... tlt-4141 SS1 DUS •WflA .. W~/ S..W..U,..llilll 111111 7 ...... 11 ...... AMC OJ_,. .... '31-0340 ll4-H 11 IH 'llH C»tSlUJIO WUTlllUlll '8tdc 1 ""'-0 I \IA C- 49l .. ~S ltl~ • .,_, !Xl!!'i'-J * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * Bargain Matinees! •U~~ih:il4 J ·1~~) ~ MONDAY Tlttu SATURDAY FACUlTYo1CANOlEWOOO All 'erfotma,.cn I.tort S 00 "" (h s,ec. En.-ttmtnll & Holll 1Ml6l72;e) LA MIRADA AT ROSECRANS "SWING HT" (PG) 12 30. 2:35. 4'40. 6:50. 9:00. 11.05 "fMTLllS(" (PC) 17)1) lGO 5JO 100 IOlO "FUIAT TIE 131lt, Tt£ flW. CHAPTO"(R) 12 40, 2·40, 4:40, 6:40. 8:40, 10:4 W11D Of 5 ACADOIT AWMDS INCllllltG llCST P'ICTlllE. DIRECTOR NII ACMSS "TOMS Of DlllAllDT'' (PG) 12 30. 3 OS. S.40. 8 20. 10 55 ''CllYSTMl. Tll llCE• If TUZAll, LOii Of Tll APlS" (PC) 1130 JOO SlO IO'i 10 40 "ltUICllC TK ST•·· (PC) 11 DOU~ SlllllO 100 llO •oo l lO 1100 "fa>A T TIE Unt. M flW. CtWTO" (I) 12-46. 2.45. us. 6 45, 8 so. 1050 WllO Of 5 '1C1111M AWMDS "TOMS Of OllOmJW' (PG) 12:30. 3.05. 5:45. 8:20. 10:50 "fMTlMSl" (PC) 12:30. 3:00, 5:30. l-00. 10:30 "tf TIE CllD"(R) 1:00. 3·00, 5:00, 7:00'. 9:00. 11:00 "IClllST Ill MIS" (I) I 00 J)O 600 llO II 00 "SWllS StlfT' (PG) 12:30. 2:35. 4:40. 5:45, 1:50. 10:55 ·wscw • Tll •stt·· (I) 1730 JOO SJO 100 IOlO 4."Can't Slow Down" UoncJ Richie (Moiowa) 5. "Sports" Huey Lewis & Tbe News (~it) 6. "Colour By Numbers" Culture Oub (Varain-Epic) 7."Touch" Eurythmics (RCA) 8."Love at Fint Stins'' Scorp1ons (Mercury) 9."Heartbeat City" The Can (Elelttra) 10."She's So UnusuaJ" Cyndi Laupcr (Ponra.it) 11 ." Leaming to Crawl" The Pretenders (Sire) 12.·•tnto the Ga "Thom n Twiot Arim ... 990-4021 UA MOVlS 4 CISTI IW S-46-2711 COWS. SOUTH COASI PlAZA CISTI IUA 631 3!>01 EDWARDS HARBOR TWIN lftlll 551 06S5 EDWARDS W0008RIOGl lACIU mus 768 &61 1 LAGlN HI.LS MALL -.. •ts-6220 EOWAllOS ~ MALL -6370340 Ml; OIWtG£ MAU -634-3911 UA CITY CENTER -6349361 PACIFIC'S ORMGE DR~ IUIWTD W...5333 UA WESnMSTU Ml • fl TORO lll• .. =~r.:;=-----=cot=-:Dl=-::IWlll=I SAOOUBACI( s ta«Jl/'I AWMOS SO 1.., ... 111 --..r IN) \D 10 ' '' "ltmOf~ (N) ~ -t •S •GO 6 JO I lS IUS I 1"' 1' I •S 4 IS 64~ 'I~ 7!11 .. 114 SHOMl• ~I SU0 S150Ml00 tOMi caim• ,.,°" HllT10ll sA00t.cBAcl( ........... >D 1., hW '1llmr (N) 10 1 I l!i SIS H~ (I ) ,._ l lOJlOSJOTJO,U O "'' $2 !IO ..... 111'11 .. 7•1.•1u .. 50 .. lGO 1 '"'' 11 " .-~'" ., ~I ~IO lOO )JO 110 1045 (l l TOWN CDHER ·~ ~ ":'[ = SAOOl.£8ACK • 1 D$1£Y"S ,. ,..,-$150 ----.. -._ ..... lll'l'S.-ID I•••' •u••-,., 1Sl 41'4 lGO 150S20UO I•••" 11l0150SI071S'l0 ~I SU() 1150 Ml• !,_~TH COAST 2 ~~ ~ ~ l':° 9~~ + Sal ~ 11 ~ SAOOlfBACK "f'GlJCI K.mllf" Cl> l2SOlol lOO \D ••• ,, 100. JOO UO 1 1.,, •• 100 tCl!I II Cl!I .;.,,.__,.......,..,._,..,.----,.._,,,,_,,.,.,,.,._= Sil S110 S1SO M l OO M fnm-ll'Sl t JO Jo 6 GO I IS 10 I~ SAOOl.£8ACK !146·2111 OOlBVSllMO l!SO 1000 '0 10.,1 ......,TOllU"~ IHS HO H O 630 8)0 10~ S1 S0hl JOO SOUTH COAST 1' 1"' 11 ~•• saao WlSTOIL M Ulll9 Of 'MlJll(' (l'C) 11 O'i 1 )I) s 00 1)0 1000 $l so,. l-00 ~ -nt:SI...-ll'C1 -700 I \ 6 1~ llO 10~ 631 J!IOI l7 !IC to 00 HAR80it f WIN IWID 10 ICU" (11) UM JO'i 100 10~ ,. ..... ,....l'l'Cl 631 l~I J1e DC H~ I~ M( SA IU "ffltl...-IPCl sun ...., '""" & JO ''WSITlr Ill U 11 11oo """' 6 JO 10 ZS .,..lM 1• 111,_~(I) H.fflO l2S0111l00 LA GUN A Hill S AGllCA HllS MALL ID 1., So -a.I" (l'C) Ooll I•• lt 117'6 IS I IS 1015 76H611 h1 ..,_ '1 so lAGl& Hl.LS MAU Isl ,,... S2 so It 1 .. , So 4 lbCJ. OCl" Stt•O Oo n i.,. ._ "1PlAlll" (l'C) 161·6'11 111s 2 JO u~ 1 oo 91~ lAGlfiA tit.LS MAl.l IXUY SIUIO .,...._ Ill: STGlr <'Cl 110110 ~~ l~BO lst -S2!11 l'R"""'~!WI ....... 111 ...-111 '' b •• • I~ 1 v" , oo SOUl H COAST \ ~ •'lllMOS ..:....;._;..;._..;..__________ .... .... -nm ar '*_..(PC) lll>A! Ill: ... " ....... .... """1 • t JO flt "* CtWl'tt Ill •• • ' • CV 1----==--=~,--- I ' SOUIH COAS ~KIS:..~~1fl -.nTGll( .. ll-111 I IWll" (I'S) ,, io 1ooe I '>O hi JOO ...... Tll ....... Cll •• •00 ·~ 10~ P 'IG 111 J• .ADI 111111111 S-."1 4"1 '. ;o '. 110 '"' U!llltl\Oll P'ClJCI ~ (I) 110 : • l) ~JOl!(l llJO IUl..IJOI IRVlfl: ..... ,. I -.,.., \~I °'~) woooeaw ""l'!llJ'. ,. ••. ' y. ,,._ "' ~ " ""• ~ IU C.S-Cl) .... -.. .....n.n I• • I.JO FOUNTAIN VALLfY me VALLEY nt1 OISll:lS ·mn_..<C> ' ' , 11: 11\ ) 00 'IS S1 '!O ·-) 00 I !MIS ~"' 41 •• 115 11 lt s.no1u• WCS TMINS TCR CfUIA MST n111 .._ ..,.....,,., -•r 4") -•n IO •~ UO I IS II I) n l )93~ U !ll 111 lC CMMA WlS I ~ ftl ... ,_,., l(CIJlt Of ,..,... tN) -· -· DO 7 ll \~ I JO IUO ltllU~ S:~hlllCI CKMA MST .,..,., ..... fPlll ... -.. a. 1• , ... 10 -.., 'fOOI\-<'I) UI 3'3S J 1oe •'A I tiifilii W£S f HCAOC• ~ ... -.. ftm9. ~ fPll) .._._, 10I •• , ••• n1nn uww1 HUNTINGTON BUrH GAR[)(N GROVl , 1.. °'11111 Ollle GM.Y PLOT/T\mdlr, Apfl 11, _. i PS ..... f ~~ ! j I J _______ __.,.~ THE Ft\MILl' CIRCUS J'M TIREP Of ~EIN<f 1fME !AME OLP &ENf.RY. DO YOO KNOW WMAT t MEAN? BIG GEORGE . by Gui Arriola by Jim Davis AT LEAf>T YOU <1ET TO e>E £. &ENE.RY by Virgil Partch (VIP) by Bii Keane "Was I born on a Monday , Mommy?" MARMt\DUKE by Brad Anderson "Believe me. Reverend. it's only an illusion · · MOO~ MULLl~S HOOtd:t> ... ® PEANUTS YOU VE MOVED? WELL ~ow WILL [ FIND MY WAY TO YOVR NEW NEST ? TUMBLEWEEDS . .. • "He'• 1tartlng a new comic 1trtp -with talking people.'' by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Charles M. Schulz '(OU DON'T HAVE TO PUT IN ALL T~E CONTINENTS by Tom K. Ryan THE POICING PAIS North South vulnerablt!. West deal . NORTH •A H t>AKQJU 0 A10 •U WEST ~AST • 8 • KQl0 4 t> u <:? 106 0 432 O KQ975 •AKJIOU3+Q6 SOllTH +J 7632 •;• 8 74 0 Jll6 •H Tht· h1ddinK Wot Sorlh •:ut South 3 + 4 s • ? IJn Ol.111\ 111Ta"''"' ~1· ha'" f""' d •11111 11r11hh·m' SHOE r.e1udf na Lhe (ortlnr pan. In pneral. the rule 11 thal. when your parlMrahlp b in a ~ame foftin« auctJon. either your tide pl11y11 lhc hand or thr o\hl'f •idt' play11 It douhlcd. However. lhrr~ are many olhcr situations where the forcinl{ pau applk11 - f'Mlll{h ror ~:dd (' Kant.ar lO hnvt• wriltrn a bookll'l about lht• bid l"Thr ~·ortinl{ J•M~ in ('ontrart Bridl(I'." hy ~:dwln K11 nl11r Barrlny Hndl{r Sup pht·'· H llu"h A \It•.. Port rhf·~11·r. ~ \ 11'17:1. 7'l pp. l'arwrh;11·k $.I~·, fllu' S lill pmta){c•t Thi' '' not I ht• '' uH for t h1· r.1 nk .rnd lllt• hrnhw pla.vc•r. hut 11 you la kt• .'our f'lolrl lll'r'hlJI' 't'rlot"h , I Oii cannot afford to bt wfthoul il. Cover up all but lhf' South hand and tht'I aucllon. and deddt• wh1tl IU'tion you would t.akc'. Mosl plAyen would pa11 because they have oothlnr. However, JCant.ar c:ont..ndt . and rlghlly. tbal a pau would be forcing. ll would imply !80ml' values, becausr It expr<'u r11 doubt as lo whether lo double or bid on. "You mu11l double•! l'artnrr ha~ ~hown 11 "lronic hnnd (Onr <1ho11ld not prt•rmpl din •rlly artrr :in opt'ninK prt•t•mpt iv c· bid h~· th\• oppont•nhl .. •.• You cu't brv.19' ulc 10UI Med bet.au... It Mptlt11. Hol'fla" Ant • .,, Jodll '" Joriet.1 pa. net'°"• to wo"' ,...C• aoonu t bid.di" 1 °"' "A• you can lff even foe heart.a I• too hlJh. Perus partner would double If ya paa.ed. but 1u~ly he canlH be criUtlud for blddin1 f u thl'r. Th<' K Q x x x In elth4 spndt>• or diamonds would h t•nou~h to m11kt' rivt heart.I. Thr rult• h«'rt' il1: Any tim you and your parlntr bav volunl:mly btd ICl'mt• a(ltr a :1dvrrsc• p~·t'mptivr optnin hid, ;111 'IUb~·111wnt passrs b .vour icld1· nrc• rorrinic. It'' in lh1• book! by Jeff MacNell) ~ --~~--~----~:Cl9'- BRABBLE 0 1964 ~teor111ui1 SyncloG•I~ inc ~~m, A~ Wi~ Of ~E:f~ .. AAIAK~ U!ifW ~Rf., M° ~ Of fHf.M ~Pf.l.l~~IZf. ll'i OulK.~~ FOR BETfER OR FOR WORSE Na41, Pf\S~ 1fie. ~ FROM ONE le.AM ME.MeER1b I f\t-KJlHe:R . Bl& DEAL I LE~ I $0 ~ .... CON'f UKE MIC>iAE.l JAc.K."ON / I o DR. S~OCK ROSI:: IS KOSl I'M GOIN& INTO ~OON.~ ... ~~~'IZE ~r~P LO<~ ICSM'S~NOTUI~. WEV'e. GOf OOE. PRIZE L..E.Pf ! Cf\N FWVONE. lHINK OF f\NOTHER 6At1e.1b MY? by Lynn Johnston Hey! WHICHONE Of YOJGDYS • c~ oet\L Blf\a<Jf\CK'?' by Tom Batluk DID c;ov HEM 1AA1 ! ~ L8 ~'fUKEM~ :J'CK~!! __ ~~--J ReMOVING AMAO RAee>r"f'S CARRO'T' FROM A MAGICIAN'S eAR! C.OOVE C:iJT' ~ 8E KIOOING ~! I~ rlB>ME~ 5~!! by George Lemont "-_,, by Pat Brady It la Ii ,, ·r it • u it .. r I! t r n ( r COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK l!XCHANQe : Christy joins Laguna Bank staff ~reenspan: Recovery depends on selecting J.U Wan, presjdent of TIM .... ,... BaU, bas annolJnced that Wally C.rl1t1 has joined the staff as a construction loan officer. Christy held a similar position at Lapu Fe4eraJ Savi.qi ud Lou A•Nda· tioe for I 6 years prior to joining Laguna Bank. He and his wife Audrey and their three children have lived in La,auna for two decades. • • • Evaa Corkett, award-winnina sales agent at the Newpon Beach office of Coldwell Baaker Retldftl· tlal Real E1tate Servlce1, has been named senior residential consultant CHRISTY by. Tlaom11 S. Grlffla, president. Pnor to her promotion. Corkett held the title of residential co~sultant. She and husband Tom Corkett arc long-time residents of Balboa Peninsula where they live with their four children. • • • Wllllam "Biii" Ho1tetler has been named marketing manager of the Air & Space Products Diviaion of Parker Bertea Aero1paee Gro1p, according to Bob J oaes, generaJ manaaer of the lrvine-bascd>division of Parker Bualfla Corporatloa. Hostetler will continue as contracts and proaram manager. He joined Parker in 1977 as a pr~m manager and last year accepted the addittonal responsibilities of contract management. He and his wife. Joyce, live in Tustin. • • • Martaa Bitler has been promoted to vice president and director of account services for Ktac Adverlillac ud PabUc Rtlatioa1 in Newpon Beach. announced Sudra Klas Braytoa, agency president. Butler has more than a decade of account service and marketing experience in Orange County's residential and commercial reaJ estate industry and will continue to supervise the agency's Ml11loa Viejo Compuy account. • • • Newport Ba1laes1 u cl Mall Servlee1, offering 500 mail boxes for rent. has opened at 328 N. Newport Blvd. in Newport Beach, accordina to manager Dawn Baker. ~ .. Artllar C. Dulellu, president of the Newport Beach-based architectural and planning firm of Dulellu A11oclatet, will be a featured speaker at the Thursday the right deficit cu~e CORKE'M' HOSTETLER BUTLER meeting .of the Los Angeles chapter of the Building Industry A~sociation. Danielian's firm has won numerous design awards for small homes. The BIA dinner begins at 7 p.m. at the Westwood Plaza Holiday Inn. • • • The Newport Beach commercial loan office of Secerity Pacific Mort1a1e Corpora tloa has arranged a $3.89 million permanent loan to GrultevlUe Compuy, for a three-story garden office building in Beverly HiJls. Security Mortgage is a subsidiary of Secarlty P aclflc Corporatloa, a diversified financial services company with assets of more than $40 billion. • • • Koll Coa1tnetloa Compuy, a subsidiary of the Koll By JOY DEE ANTHONY Olllr ,_.. C.1 llS I ..... , What is more imponant than the deficit, s.aid Dr. Alan Greenspan at the 18th annuaJ Economic Forum sponsored ~Y Chapman College, is the perception by members of the financial coi:nmunitl that the budget- ary process 1s out o control. that we are seeing a "fiscal hemorrhage." Though Greenspan. an economic advir;er to President Reagan, sees "light at the end of the tunnel," he warned that decisions made in the first half of 1985 which affect interest rates will decide whether the current economic recovery peters o ut or gains momentum. If the Federal Reserve prints excess amounts of money, Greenspan said, the American dollar will inflate at a rate of 8 or I 0 percent a year over the next decade. which will in tum cause Dr. Alan Gr een.pan interest rates to nse. If that happens. the current economic recovery will cave in b}' aud-1985 if oot IO()Oe'I' Greenspan said. ' ff 1nflatton 1m't seven enousb to push mterest rates up, l.ben lbc recovery will continue at a tood s-ce. Greenspan explained. If intetal ra1a actually drop, tbe process of econ- omic growth will gain zat in '8S, with no sjgns of overheating the economy. The mannu 1n wbtcb the de.fiat question is solved will determine how long our recovery lasts, Greenspan said. "If we raised ta.Jtcs by bu,e amounts to close the deficit, we would find that two or three years from now. rather than close the deficit we will have raised funds for more speadiQs. ·That would create even greaier .COO· ccm in the financiaJ community." Compuy, has completed construction of the 1984 Olympic Shooting Venue in the Prado Dam recreational area of San Bernardino County. The three-sided metal buildinfS arc built for the free pistol. running boar and rifle compeutions, in addition to the enclosed metal buildjng for the air pistol competition. Koll is headquartered in Newport Beach. • • • Rober t Ku& has been appointed Maitre D' of La VTN Corp. reports losses America is experiCDCtng a unique recovery, Grccospan commented. one that arose out of amazinaiy hiab interest rates and unusuallylowleveb of inventories. The process of risina from the bottom of the business cycle began when the depletion of inven .. tones could go no furtheT, be added. Production eventually bad to ao up to replace the used-up stocb. l'be momentum from rising productjon is still being felt today, Greenspan said. Palme Rettaeraat at Tlae Newporter Resort, according to Leu Manlaall, general manager. Prior to joining The Newporter, K.aag served in a similar capacity at the Towera Re1taeraat in Laguna Beach and the Re.gj1try Resort in Scottsdale, Ariz. He lives in Costa Mesa. .._ Irvine-based VTN Corp. has re- ported results for the third quaner and the first nine months ended March 2. The net loss for the third quaner was $444, 981, or 2 1 cents per share on 2,082,522 average shares outstand· ing. compared with a net loss of $203, 796, or I 0 cents on 2,059, 145 average shares outstanding for the like period last year. Revenues for the third quaner were $3,995.369 vs. $3,919,582 for the hlce period last year. The net loss for the first nine months was $398,759, or 19 cents on 2,082,449 average shares outstand· ing, compared with a net loss of $417,674, or 20 cents on 2,056,998 average shares outstanding last year. Revenues for the first nine months were S 12. 904,412 vs. $13,405, l 84 for the Hice period last year. VTN is a highly diversified inter- national engineering. arch1tccturaJ, planning and environmental design firm. Added to the production comeback was a huge chunk of money earned from the saJc of existing homes sold in large numbcn after interest ratn declined. Greenspan explained. With the added purchasing power of con· sumers plus cooling fears over the probabibty that more workers would be laid off. a great deaJ of cash became available with which to fuel economic growth. NEW YORK (AP) -TM '*wine Rsl snows the Ovef"·lhe·Counter stodls •l'ld werr•nts th•I heve DOne up the most •nd down the most based on l>ef'Cent of cnenoe tor B':-'t.11vena lingering doubt over the stab1hty of the recovery, new invnt· ment has been skewed very bca~ into projects with a 2 to 4 year pay-off. Greenspan commea~. Longer-lived investment simply hasn't occurred. This preference for shon-livcd projects has given tremendous impetus to computer and telecommumcauons mdustnes. he added. areas which arc b) their very nature short-lived. Any dramau- cally COSt·reducmg CQU1pment IS also getting funded . Monday. No ucurlli.s tredlno below S2 or 1000 shares are lnduded. Net and 11ercent•i>e ch~nues are the difference betwHft bid price and todav's last b d Price. the orevlous closlng UPS Last 1 Nfme ~vrg h 2~ Cho +1 2 3 m~P s112 rh + lYI rog L l,4 .. Pens Ins ~ s OecaEn 2~ t;, i M lnlscr 4tle 3,4 FCap~lf 23·16 5·16 F•lcn v. Ma~ 1~ 1 f j ~hid n 2 l: 'I• ,las d 2~ A l 'h AlpnGe 21"16 v. a Teko O'h ~'h COPlJ•I ''h l9 Ille un 4 lll lndly 17 l'h ll Ina le~ 41;. lit ~Cnv WI 1~ 1 u ~ncrtt 'I• F tyFn 4~ ~ OmnlRsh 4"9 lll D yes. I want a cash bonus of SSO or more! Deposit m.cn> in our l·ye•r ~ 2·ye•r .l((OUOI lod.Jy •nd yoo11 ret €'i\lt' S50 in col.Sh. lkll our bonu~ don't stQg there. St•rt with .H littlt ~ Sc;()l 11f .. , much .as Sl00,000 •nd you'tl get • bonu' of up tn S.~! D yes. I have maturing funds to reinve t. Whether ,.our 32~. fHTionth or »month •crount I\ coming due, your ~ rncwe riaht now k to lo<tt In today' high bonu~ N•NntP .tt C~.it Ameriun. D yes. I want• ohort-term, high·yield account. l°'* how bonus Interest boosts~~ on• 6-month .t<rount. And k's more on l·yt» ~ 2-,-e.1 KroUnts, "'hkh m.ib ~l'<t IRA lnwstmmh. Pct Up 61.5 UP r UP 7.J UP ~.1 Up . 1 UP 8.2 UP 16.7 UP 1.C.i Up 12. UP l 1.8 UP 11.6 Up 1 J.1 Up l8 UP I .S UP 1 .4 Up 1p UP .7 Up 9.7 UP g.1 UP .I UP u Up DOWNS Name Last Chg Pct 1 Celcm un 2 3 4 s 6 7 8 9 10 H 13 14 lS ,, 17 ll JV 22 3 -1 PeociRr 2:lt ~ f llawtp un 2'·• .,, Irvine i· .... ~ Pr~UnHd lll Un OJI s 4 ~ ~nvTr wt 311. •12 lllln)J: l~ ~ ~Nw wt l . lrclEa •;, tntg'so 4~ ~ IPL y 4 ,,., PhnMat 2 I • lntBar s 2 1-16 .,. MlchStr f J\ ~ Mdwls 'I\ v. Sloan c 411. ...., ·~ ,., Et'rlC•I ~ I Sys lS'h -13.lo msrve 4''> -I 1 4'"> -'> Ka'(don Dio1tS s 23 -21, SJ~ SS Gvrocivn 1•"6 U"1 Had$0n I I~ HamOtl 11 • ll'"J .... rDGo 16 "J 16\j; H•rlfN l JI~ JI"' Hecne , 1'1"o It~ HenrdF l~ 13-., HOOV« 11'') 191't Horf1Ri 22""' 23 IMS Inf 11' • 111, ISC IS'• 16 lnfrelncl ,... , I"' .. ' 13'') •• ntrc Enr 3'1'> )9~ lnlgrl'fl 2' • J'-1nrmtG1 •''° n8W'11 16' • I '• waSoU1 7 • ''> Jem1b• 37'" ll Jerico 37 ... ~ •1J1ttv , "° J<n!vn tt • lit Ke!"•' 1~ ., ~•men ' U' U,, K=j, 1h H " Kl"91nl 1S"t 1i·" KloofG 12 l I , K V 11 "> I K. :.':f: IM ij .... Kule-• \ I ~ t::Tt., ~ '-L~.._' 1 • 2~ Lllr!V\ > t , L•nera ' l "' • l~''" 110 110 M I l l>l >MFO 6 6'"> MedlGE •• , ,,._ Me1141tP1 11' • II ) Me1R1 111 • 1' •IMtlon 11'" 11 ''< MeutlP 1•''1 IS MevPI 30·,. Jl Meyn()t 20VJ 20lot McCrm 1:i.. 2', McFerl n'IO 1• McOuev l)'IO I• MlduW I"• l'"I dlOCep ~''• 3J,~ lllllO!Re1 •• l6 ., llll10f8k ff lot 1711 111\ltllC>< ~. I) • M lu VI(, • tt 1 111\o .. I \ 'l ~ MorlfCI J\<o .._ MonuC > .._ MooreP 2i 1S • MOrr\n I I• 1 , MotCID 2 21'> M~ ~ , •1 "> Ntrr!IC • ~ NDelf ... • N1Wk$ ' ~ • NYlun , N;c,oc, > ""' Ni.t\A 11 • 11 • N~''t 2S 2S > N -· ' ·~ NC•r ' ll>. l1 • NwN -1·1t ~ 17 li • Noa• 1• l .. ~ .. ..., i'-._ '"' M I It ; ~~O 2a.o 2 .8 11.2 !Iii 11.1 'f 1 ., is·f !~·8 8 &-Mon•h 11.153 Auount Yield with bonu~ • .... I 11.253 ~I Yield wilh bonu~· I 2·'1\-.ir 11.75% AHount Yield "'ith bonus• vrcenspan placed the odds at 55 to 45 that we wall get the deficit down enough an 1985 to keep the recover) going. The citiz.enry, he added, has been tremendously effective at con- vincing Congress that this 1s more than an economic problem. In the eyes of Americans. Greenspan said. spendi~ more than you take in is a moral dilemma. 10.163 Current r•te 10.25% urttnl r.itt 10.93% Current r.itt lou , .., .Aho ,...,. bolftU\ ~ on l lo ~-lftvt'UOt 44 u !Uftt • ' lfi4 ""-..... "" Oii .,._. .... ,, ""~ -11""""' "'-~ "'dw ~ "'""' •r-J "'4 ....-. lllwtil bt l.Ppt 1'I t<t --~ -..nn '" ""Id u • ... ~ liot _...... ,\,10..11011tbjt("l IO IOWl.k-111 boolroatt ....... t•n'r1111t •1<1:1. r .. ......, _,bf~-• "'1 hlM ..... ""'"*--.I ol pr.wopal pnur tu.....,....., --.. ..,.....,,. --~,... '°''""" ..... """' .......................... ,_ ..... t<'I 1(1(1\o<llf ~t 00tf h lim•fCl ~ tOUf •<ount ~ .., pMOl'I ~ M ul chc-tol"" HNntl.al tifw f m-L..:J On the --.·--·· _____ .,....., ____ ~~-------:'.'~~~~~~~~~~~~----------~~..-.... "".9 ....... ~ ............. lml!" ........... 19' ........................................................ 11111 ........ ... , e ' N~W YOlll( CA~> -FINl Oow·Jontt ffl!IT IOr T""411Y, Aawll 17. New YORK CAP> A.or. '7 NYSE Ll AOERS NEW YORK (AP) -s.IH. T~Y Price •nd ~t chall99 of the 15 motl ac ve New Yfvk tock E~d\a luuet. tra no axter t'[ev ' • • ~ I 1~ i'i!to:t&.: more • ' . ~~ -1'h evco0$ • •1• I• alslnPur ¥! ~ i~•lm • '"' rL ~mer \a. T n ~ -~ r:., s lti~ = ~ ordMot s + 'h MerllLyn I 1h -1 ~Sier Bi +1~ Pt111~ U· 121M :t ~ UP s AND DowN s NE W YORK (AP) -The tollowlno 11'1 Wl<>ws the New York Stock Excnanoe •toO• ind warrants that have tone uP the motl and down tn. most bllMd on perc:efll of cn.nge regardless of volume ,or Ta-=~ur I tradlno below S2 are 1"£1.: . Net = oer~taoe cl'la!IMI are ! ... •nc• w"n the previous clOs ng ~'~~·· YJ!;· ~1 H:~Nl l ~1:t0 ~ ¥: UP 1t. ! !tf.ll,lm,. I ,.. 'it 8: !: l ~;~ 14@ ,~ ~: :l lY 'ml! • llv. ~ §~ ,: l~ li~ y~ l:~ Up r1• l ~~~27PI ll~r.: :~ 8~ t: ~~l'lfo ~ UP 6. !S!!:~~ ~f l.7()pf ~·\ Ir: 8~ t:.! ~!I~! n ~ 1~ 8~ 1· lee JM 1'.4 UP ·.·.·.1 4 ero nl s v. 'h UP s svst•m , 00~~5 1~ UP NarM L•t' ~ni. Peli l St~j~~o ~ = ~V. 1·f ! l'larter o pf -h; ·1 ' orroon 2 '" -3J<e 1 '.4 S nPw 2.239r 1 -11/• 1 .2 6 oldnN~I -~ ·.~4 7 nPw 4. I -,I/ . • 8 ar.ter wt 7i't -~ .'• t nPw 4. pr I/• -'I• " 1~ ~~~.1k t t: = tt :t 1~ Ei~r 1m = 1~ .4 !Mam g 7~ _ ~ :It nllHarv wt 4 ~ -I/• 4 2 ·:: Elect As\Q( S -'I• 4 Adam Mlllll I~ -34 Rol*'CP ' 1 -34 Anacomp ~ -1A 4. 4 Armada Ci> 11 -1!t! 4. S Cl'lemed 301h -..., ' WHAT AM£x Om NEW YOltl( (AP) Apr. 17 Adv a~ Oecllned ¥~=' New l'ltens New lows AMEX LEADER S NEW YORK (AP) -sales. T~•Y price and net cnanoe of the 10 most act ve American Stock E•Cha IHUH, trad no nationally at more than • ,, WanoLab8 m· ~ + ~ Gra r --.... Hea~l'lm , ~ -~ l'lrEx' , 3 V. ..., ;~Comm ' ~ liv. :f: 1h OFMPtrl 1 ~ l + 1-16 ~~~' 1: ~ t ~ ~~Corp l'--I• i;iii11zmlW NEW YORK (AP) ....:. Mo't acllve.pvltC- ·ll'le-COYnter ''odl' su_pptled bv ... ASO. Na~ Volui Blf d Asked Cll9 I I 874 Ya 1/• ra~ 1'.1 : 1 lM I Ve +1'1• Quolrn ' 6 , v. -1;, Tand0!1 • 1 1"1 ~ G"''°"" ru. 1'.. 1 ,. + w lnl•I l ~ ~I/• 'h -'I• Ma~sl r "~'i 111> 1'4 -'I• .. ru 2 1,.., 2~ -11 .. "' I 1 ~ 1 ~~\:~ ' • : ~ 4Jl + - Go Lo QuoTES METnLs Quon s That's an a pt description of both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are going and which people are helping them get there.just watch ~credit Line' -v ryday in the Business section of your new lllilJ Pilat A • .. l .. Edleon MnNtlon Julle Cerpenter 101111 p1if80t9 In tourner. C2. Hrb~k. slams door on. Angels UClstghs~ Bryan wnnama Bryan Willium, a s;.10 ~ from ~ Bernard Hilb ill Leii ~. bu siped a Mli'iamll letter of intent 10 play al UC Irvine next ICaSOn. Controversial play sets up big inning as Minnesota rolls past Halos, 9-2 runs they've had in a sinaJc innina since they soored 10 apinst Oakland on April 27, 1980. "I kind of fouJ ti~ it into his &love,•• Hatcher said. "I lcind of fooked back and the next thina I know, it hit my bat again. That's all right, you strike out and come out smelling like a rose." MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Kent Hrbek hit the second arand slam home l'J.lD of his career to highlight a 9-2 victory by the Minnesota Twins over the Angels Monday night. Hrbck•s 382-foot grand slam to right-«nter field off reliever John Cunis capped an eif_ht-run sixth inning. It was Hrbek s first grand slam since he hit one a.pinst Kansas CityonJunc 10, 1982.hisrookieyear. The Twins sent 12 men to bat in the Dodgers save best for last Marshall's double with 2 outs in 9th gives LA 5-4 win HOUSTON (AP) -Everyone thouP1t Los Angeles' Mike Marshall was in control of the situation when he faced Houston reliever Frank DiPino with the game on the1ine in the ninth inning. The Dodgers had the bases loaded and two outs and Ma.rshall was facing three balls and only one strike. But the Astros were ahead 4-3 and Marshall said he figures that means Di Pino was in command. "I didn't work him at all," Marshall said. "He had the lead, so he had the upper hand." Marshall changed that. doubling to left-center field. to chase in two runs and lift the Dodgers to a 5-4 victory Monday night. DiPino. 1-1. had to pitch down the middle. sixth innfog. putting together five singles. three walks and Hrbck's grand slam for eight runs before Mickey Hatcher cncfed the inning by fouling out to deep left. Earlier in the inning. the Twins attempted a do uble steal when Hatch- er struck out. but catcher Bob Boone hit Hatcher's bat when he tried to throw Hrbek o ut at third. No interference was called and the Twins went on to t~te up the most "It wasa big play," Twins' Manager BiJly Gardner said. "There' was a chance they might have thrown Hrbek out at third. I thOught that was the play that turned it around for us." The Twins were trailing 2-1 at the time. Angels' Manager John McNamara lnine IUCh abort.top Jobn Scott (riaht) Jan't really laaPPf about tb.lj play. Be'• almply amlllng ln bewilderment after appealed the play, but home plate umpire Mike Reilly, after conferrina with first bue umpire Don Denk- inger and third bue umpire Al Clark, ruled Hatcher stayed in the batter's box. "I know he was in the batter's box." Reilly said. "But I got blocked and couldn't see what it hit." "That changed the complexion of the inning right there." complained McNamara. "Oark wd he didn•t interfere. It's their judgment, so what arc you gonna do't' Mike Smithson. 3-0, P.itcbed a six-bitter for the Twins, stn.king out a career-high nine and walking tW.o. Ron Romanick. 1-1, was JbeUed in the Twins' sixth and suffered the loss. The Anaets took a 1-0 lead in the founb on a walk to Rod Carew, a double by Doug OeCinccs and a sacrifice fly by Brian Downing. The Twins t~ed. it on doubles by Reed and Brown in the fifth. The Angels went ahead tempor- arily in the top of the sixth on doubles by Fred Lynn and DeCinccs. The teams resume play tonight with the Angels send lcfthander Tommy John (0-1) against Minne- sota's John Butcher (0--0). The series concludes Wednesday night. ...., .... ,...... ................ the umpire called Katella'• Brian Barklna (18) aafe.. lniDe won the 11ame, 8-2. Williams, a team ca&*i-~ earned fint-team, Al-c.iliiillO Real Lcque credefttUD ... season, averqed 10 poi.Das Md au assists a pine last tealOL He joins five other players wM have signed national lettcn IO play for Coach Bill Mulli9a: Guards Rodney Scott (St. f"ohia Bosco), Jesse Ellis (Duarte), Boril King (Palm Sprinp) cent.er Eric Leekner (Mira Costa) and for· ward Wayne EngJeslad (Bolco Tech). Steamy LA no problem Boston Marathon winner says he'll train in the heat BOSTON (AP) -Rainy-day run- ner Geoff Smith. the winner of the '"88'tb Boston Marathon, thrives on wet, windy days in the fall and sprina. But what about steamy Los Aqeles in the thick of its Olympic summer'! No problem, says the oonfident Englishman who splashed through puddles and crushed the competition Monday to captUre the Boston Mara- thon by four minutes. 15 seconds, one of the widest margins in the event's history. "I think I'm all right," he said. "I intend to come back and train under those (warmer) conditions. .. Last Oct. 23,anothcrcool and rainy day. Smith led for much of the New Y orlt City Marathon only to be passed by Rod Dixon 385 yards before the end. Smith finished second in two houn. nine minutes, ei&bt seconds. the fasteSt debut marathon in history. "He's got to throw a strike in that situation," Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda said. "He can't go for the comers. Pie can•t go high. He C<Oi't go low. He can't walk the guy. He's got to come in with the ball." Marshall admitted he was guessing fastball. "I was lo.ok1ng for my pttch." he said. "I wasn't going to htt his pitch. I pretty m uch knew what was coming with a 3-1 count. I was thinking fastball all the way.·· Warriors rewrite record book H is time of 2: 10:34 Monday in his second marathon was only the 19th fastest in history and the slowest winning time here smce 1980. But he was running into an often stiff headwrnd. The outcome ruined an Astro rally which saw Houston score four runs in the sixth inning to erase a 3-0 Dodger lead. "We battled back and they b;!ttled back," Astros' shortstop Craig Re- ynolds said. "If we hadn't lost some tough games early, this one wouldn't feel so bad." Jerry Reuss, who had won I 0 of his last 12 decisions against Houston. had things well in hand through 51h innings. Ken Landreaux's RBI ground out and Pedro Guerrero's sacrifice fl y gave Los Angeles a 2-0 ed~e in the third inning, a nd Reuss' third hit of the game, a run-scoring single in the sixth inning. made it 3-0. The Astros. who had scored only two earned runs off Reuss in 37 previous innings, got four straight hits to chase him in the bottom of the sixth. Enos Cabell and Jose Cruz led off with singles and RBI singles by Jerry Mumphrey and Ray Knight cut the Dodgers' lead to 3-2. Phil Gamer's sacrifice bunt and an intentional walk to Alan Ashby set the stage for Reynolds to give Hous- ton a 4-3 lead Wlth a double to center field. Woodbridge romps to tourney win; Estancia, Laguna Beachtrtumph It was a prosperous day for area high school baseball teams in Easter vacation tournament act ion. particu- larly for Woodbridge which rewrote the record book in a romp over Savanna. Estancia. Westminster, Laguna Beach and Saddlcback also found their way into the win column Monday. Here's what took place. Woodbridge %4, Savanna 3 The Warriors set a school record for runs and hits ( 18) in a single game in romping to a victory in the Anaheim Lions' T ournament at Glover Field. The victory propelled Woodbridge into today's consolation cham- pionship game against Carson. The game was called af\er six innings because of a time limit. The hitting stars were numerous for the Warriors, who snapped a first-inning 3-3 tie with an fi ve-run second inning. Jordan Frank had a three-run homer in the first and finished the day with six RBI while scoring three times. Teammate Rick Lee homered and tripled and finished with five RBI, while Darren Daniels was 3 for 5 with four RBI. Mike Ecklund doubled and tripled for the Warriors and had two RBI while scoring two runs. Senior lef\-handcr Randy Cook was the recipient of all the hitting support. He improved his record to 6-1. Estancia 3, Los Amigos % The Eagles came up with tw<? runs in the top of the seventh to mp the Lobos and advance to today's con- solation championship game of the Bolsa Grande Tournament. Chris Mathews played a keyrole for the Eagles in the victory, going 2 for 3 with an RBI and picking up the victory in relief of starter Jim Foley in his first pitching outing of the year. In the Eagle seventh. Aaron Douty and Steve Johnson both walked and Mathews singled Douty home. A passed ball advanced the runners and Jeff Graham's sacrifice fl y scored Johnson. Estancia had taken a 1-0 lead in the fifth as Tim Deutsch and Foley singled and a thro wing error on Johnson's sacrifice attempt brough Deutsch home. Los Amigos came up with two in the bottom of the fifth and held the lead until the Eagles rally. Lagana Beach 3, Santa Yaet I The Artists scored three times in the fourth inning and pitcher Coby Naess limited Santa Ynez to just three hits in the first round of the Santa Barbara Tournament at Santa Ynez High. Naess. a sophom ore left-hander. struck out 11 and walked one in improving his record to 2-6. It was only the third victory of the season for the Artists. In Laguna's fourth inning. Ted Hudzinski opened with a single and Chad Mahoney followed with another base hit. T om Arndt moved the runners over with a sacrifice bunt and Nacss then helped himself with a two-run single. The Artists then closed out the scoring on an RBI hit by Rex Reasor. Westminster 1%, El Modena 0 Westminster senior Jeff Moone}' limited El Modena to one hit -a single in the second inning -as the Lions scored a victory in the cham- pionship quanerlinaJ s of the Santa Ana Elks Tournament. Westminster's Guillenno Roses had the big bat. going 3 for 5 with three RBI. The Lions. up 4-0. put eight runs on the board in the top o( the sixth inning. Saddleback 10, Gardea Grove 7 Brian Jordan belted a homer and doubled. knocking in five runs in the process. as the Roadrunners went 2-0 on the day in the Santa Ana Elks Tournament. Earlier. Leonard Da- mian pitched SaddJeback to a 4-3 victory over Banning. Damian, in fact. wasn't through. In the Roadrunners' second game, he entered the contest in the seventh inning and saved it for winner Derrick Landrum. With the two victories, Saddlcback advanced to the consolation cham- pionship game today. The Roadrunners also received a big boost from Alfonso Rossano. who was called up from the Junior varsll) for the tournament and responded b) hurling 41 1 innings of scoreless ball while allowing JUSt three hlls to Garden Grove. Smtth also was trying to overcome the ~•stance oft~ Bnt1sh Amateur Athletic Board, which 1s scheduled to choose on May 15 its country's three marathoners to compete in the race Aug. 12. the last day of the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Board mcmbcTS were upset that Smith chose to run here instead of in the London Marathon on May 13. "It should impress them. I know 1t impressed me," the heavily favored Smith said ofhis performance. "If the wind had been in my favor. I think I could have run two or three minutes faster." possibly chaJlcnging Albcno Salazar's world best time of2:08: 13. Before the race, the 30-ycar-old Providence College student had said. "I'm an experienced track runner. I think Los Angeles will be a tactical race. I'm a 3:55 miler and I'm capable of sprinting at the end . I don't sec anybody in the pack going out at world record pace in 85 degrees." Smith had predicted he would beat the relative!}' weak field over the 26-mile. 385-yard course here. Af\er hed1d it by taking the lead from Arcga A.braha of Ethiopia between the fifth and SI\ th mile and ne\er losing 1t. he was asked who will be the hardest (Pleue eee BOSTON/C2) Calm before storm for Bucs, Rustlers OCC . Golden West take a breather from torrid race ByCURTSEEDEN CMhO.-,,_....,. It's the calm before the storm this week as Orange Coast and Golden West colleges take a break from the torrid South Coast Conference baseball race. Both the Pirates and the Rustlers cauabt Santa Ana atop the SC standanp last Wttk to create 1 th~way logiam entering the final nine games of the season. All of this came about when Santa Ana., which had a thrtt-pme lead a wcekqo.dropped fourof1ts next five -mclud1na baclt-to-back pmcs to Ccmtos. This week. OCC has JUSt one pme on the schedule -only ~use tbt Piralcs are at the limit of emcs they can play lJ\ a scuoo -while Golden West bas a home and home scnes wtth LA Harbor planned bc&lnn1na Thursday. Coast was onpnally 1rhcduJed to compcte 1n the Lona &ach C Tournament which bqin Wednu- day However. C'Ommun1t) oollqn are allowed to pla) JUSt 36 games a season prior to the state tournament. and OC'Cwould have played 38 had It part1c1pated in the Long Beach Tour- nament. Instead. the Pirate' will play Lona Beach Wedncsda) night at 7 at Blau Field but then bow out of the tournament -win or lose. In other words. Long Beach will advance regardless oflhe finaJ score. Golden West hosts LA Harbor Thursday and then travels to face the same team on Fnday. Both games are at noon Saddlcback, the leader m tbe Pl- cific Coast Conference. wtll compete in the Long Beach Tournament.~ Gauchos open Wednnday at 2 p.m . at Lona Beach CC •inst Cal Poly Pomona'sJun1or vantty squad The other first-round pmc of the Lona Beach Tournament will pn LA Valley and K.inp Raver at 11 am .. also at Lona &.ch CC. In t~ meantime. most of \he attention wiU be on nut week·& tttum to sec play &S far u ()('(" aod Golden West are conttmed. ··11 all comes down to who,cts hot dunna the tretcb run," says Pu·ue Coach Mike Mayne. .. And that coWd ha~n to any of the con&mden ~ team tJ\at wtn teVtn of lht last n ~II wan the this ttuna." Nettles a Padre because so01eone didn't like book? From AP dlspatcltet SAN DlEOO-Th1rd baseman Graig • Nettles says bis unflattering portrayal of Yankees owner Georp Steinbrenner in bis book, "Balls," was the "main reason" the New York team traded htm to the San Diego Padres last month. "I'm sure it (the book) was the main reason" for the March 31 trade, Nettles said." AJI spring long. he said he wasn't going to trade me. But after he got a copy of the book and read it, then he decided to discredit me by saying I was a bad influence on the ball club. ··1 think he wanted to trade me after d the book. And then want to stify 1t m the ey of the fans. coplc Stt th ough that stuff, tho I know they do. But George s never understood the feelings of the fans." Nettles. who co-authored the book with Peter Golcnbock. rc- Stelnbrenner ferred to Steinbrenner in the book as the .. Big T una." He said he knew "Balls" would create some controvers) ... but as far as getting me traded. I never an11c1pated an} thing like," Nettles said in a interview published Monda) 1n the San Diego Tnbune '"I'll always be a Yankee." said Nettles. who spent I I years with the American League team and still wears the World Series ri ng earned by the club in 1977 ... I want to be known as a Padre. too. but" hen you spend 11 )cars in one place. a place with a~ much tradition as the Yankce·s. it's hard to thank of yourself as anything but a Yanket" or ex· Yankee:· 4 Quote of the day Ron Kltlle, ChleegO Whtw Sox tefttt1lder, .,_ hie tMm to.t to the o.troft r..,.,..· Jeck Monti, 4.:.o on a no-hitter: "AU In •N, I'd rather tMWe wtcMd htm bOWf 300." So FT BALL I~---- Yankeea re-aJan Gamble NEW YORK-The New York Yankees • re-sianed ffte .,ent outfielder Oscar Gamble ~fondly own and said be will joan the team 1mmed1atefy. Gamble. 34. who pla~ for the Yankees the tut four y~ars, .opted for 'me qency after last season but did oot S'ID w1th anotbeT team. Gamble. who hit .261 with seven home run& and 26 runs batted in last year, worked out an agreement to rejoin the Yankees prior to the team's teason opener, althouJh the contract was not finaliz.ed pendint the resuJtsofa senea of physical tcst-s. Gamble will be in unJf'onn Tuesday niaht when the Yankees play in Cleveland, the team said. No details of the contract were djscJosed. To make room for Gamble, the Yanltees sent shonstop Keith Smith to their Double-A team in Nashville. Smith had appeared in two games with the Yankees and was hitless an four at-bats. ' Women'• races won't be added LOS ANGELES ~ A bid to have the • women's 5.000-and I 0.000-mcter races added to the Olympic Games apparently has failed as a federal Judge denied a request for a preliminary inJunction filed by 82 plaintiffs from 26 countries. White U.S. Distnct Judge David Kenyon rejected the sex d1scnminatton sun Monday. ruling that no discrim ina- tton could be proven. he said he was "sympathetic." The lawsuit. backed by m ost of the top women distance runners in the world. was filed last September by Amencan Civil Liberties Union attorneys against the International O lympic Committee, the lntcrnationaJ Amateur Athletic Federation. the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee, The Athletic Congress, and the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission. The ACLU said it would not have any comment unttl today . .-<after we have more time to go over the opinion and decide where we go from here.·· according to spokeswoman Sandra La Rue. Listed among the 82 plaintiffs were American distance star Mary Decker, Norway's Grete Waitz, one of the top female marathon runners in the world, the International Runners Committee and the Roadrunners Club of Am~rica. Although she is not affected d1rcctly, Decker, winner of the 1,500-and 3.000-mcters at the World Cham- pionships in Helsinlti last summer, joined the plaintiffs to show her suppon. llllanden down cape .. Un Cluk OUUet scored two pit and ~ defenseman Pau BMUU.r bid a aoaJ and ' two usists u the New York hlUden bdd off a spirited third-period rally by the Washiqton Capitals to win S-2 Monday niabt aod take a oommandinA 3-l lead in their National Hockey Leaaue playofti Tbe fifth aame of the Patrick Division ftnals will be played on New York's home ioe Wednesday niAht. wbeo the lalanden have a cbanoe to record l ltb straiabt Stanley Cup series victory • • . Elsewhere in the NHL Mon- day niabt.. Brtu aeu.w1100red a shorthanded 1oal and TMD MeeanQ clicked oo a power play, leadina Minnesota to a ).2 victory that squared the North Stars' playoff series with the St. Louis Blues at two sames apiC<lC. TheJoals were the first in Na- tion Hockey League playoff action for each Minnesota player this year. By winning. the Nonh Ollllee Stars reclauned the home-ice advantage in a best-of-seven Norris Division series that resumes Wednesday nil.ht in Minnesota . . . Bo Ber1lud drilled a slap sfiot by Montreal goaJic Steve eu rec minutes into ovenime Monday night to · the Q cbcc Nordiques to a 4-3 victory over the Canadicns and even the National Hockey League Adams Division final at two sames apiece. The best-of-seven series shifts back to Q uebec City for Game 5 on Wednesday night ... Mark Me11ler'1 goal nine seconds into the third period Monday night lifted the Edmonton Oilers to a 5.3 victory over the Calgary flames and a 3-1 lead in their Smythe Division final. Lazera tumble in OT, 6 -5 INGLEWOOD -Rick Davis scored m at 40 seconds of an ovcnimc period Monday ntght to give the St. Louis Steamers a 6-5 Major Indoor Soccer League victory over the Los Angeles Lazers. Diego Pesa of St. Louis forced the ovenimc period when he scored at 3: 17 of the founh quancr to tie the game at 5-5. Don Eben scored twice and had one assist for the Ste.amcrs. Davis had three assists in addition to his game-winning goal. Also scoring for St. Louis were Duncan MacEwan and Tim Walters. Rookie QB nnlee Bouton Jim ~•DJ wu intercepted four tima EiJ early in the pine. pu~ Houaton in a • • • 20.0 bole .. but the rookie q_uartetbaclc 6red two toucndown puaa to a comemck whic.b rve the Oaml*R a 35--27 United Statet Footbel Leaaue victory over the winfeu Oakland Invader& Monday · niabc. Sam llaJnll ran for two touchdown&, &iv1na 6jm l 5 TDs thi1 seuon, and totalled 154 yards rushina before leavina with a bruilOd knee. The Gambkn went a.bead l8-27 when HamJl scored on a six-yard run and Ttal l'Ttbdl kicked the extra point early in the fourth period. Tbc Oamblen, S-3. cut Oakland'·• lead to 20-14 by halftime, but they were down 27-14 after Fr.I Baua threw a S9-yard TO pass to H.ade1 Smida in the third period .. K.eUy'a 2 l-yard scoring pus to Rldanl ,......, wbo alto cauP,it the ftrst TD p&55, came two minutes after Smith's touchdown . Juctae rejecta Gault requeet LOS ANGELES - A federal ooun • judge on Monday denied a request for a temporary restraining order sought by Chicago Bears wide receiver Willie Gault, who is attempting to compete in the Olympics despite his professional status. U.S. District Coun Judge Consuelo Manhall said in denying Gault's request that he should try to settle the issue with administrative hearinas before the governing bodies of national and international spons. Thus, his next step is an administrative bearin& before the U.S. Olympic Committee. Afterward. if necessary, Gault's attorney could apply for a preliminary injunction on antitrust grounds. Gault, a world-class sprinter and hurdler who signed with the Bears last year. has filed an antitrust suit against The Athletic Congress, the International Olympic Committee and the International Amateur Athletic Federation. Carpenter hurls a perfecta Edison H1g.h's Julte Carpenter tossed a perfect game and Huntington Beach's Kath)' Fogg threw a no-hitter, but the two line pitching performances did not result in a pair of v1ctones in women's softball tournament action Monda} Ho" could that happen? Edison~. Glendora 0 Carpenter, aJun1or. fired a perfect game, her second in two .. ears at Edison (and her third career no-hitter) as the Chargers ad\anced in the first round of the Royal Oak Tournament at Co.,.ina Park. Carpenter struck out 17 and improved her personal record to 7. 7 wtth the gem. She faced danger only in the fifth inning on a blooper over second base which was flagged down on a d1v1ng 1:atch b} Laura Engdall. The Chargers got all the runs they needed in the first inning on Dena Baker's solo home run. Carpenter. Kelh Winkler and Laune m1th added RBI singles for the Edison. The Chargers had a I o'clock second-round game toda) with~ l.,, ( o-.1na. aho at<. ov1na Park. Cretcenta Valley 1, HW1tlngton Beach 0 The Oilers received a no-hitter from Fogg, but three errors in the to p of the seventh inning gave Crcscenta Valley the victory in the Woodbndgc Tournament. Fogg had pitched the Oilers to a 2-0 consolation bracket victory over San Clemente earlier in the day and turned m another gem in the second contest. But the Oilers could muster just two hits in the second game. In the first game. Tamm) Bo1gen delivered an Rf:31 double and a fielder's choice brought home the other run 1n a two-run fourth inning to account for all the sconng. The Oilers are now 3-1 I. Newport Christian 7, Whittler Christian % Denise Curren lashed a pair of doubles and knocked in four runs to lead the Conquerors into today's championship game of the Western Chnsttan Tour- nament 1n West Covina. Kelly Davidson hmtted Wh1tt1er Chnstain to three htts while going the distance. She had four stri keouts. Newpon Christian 1s now 9-1 overall. .Revenge is double winner Willen berg skippers Cla_ss ~boa!_ :to victories in Whitney Series By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Delly P11ol eo.tl"t Writ., Re .. enge. a Clas' B en tr). skippered by Wayne W1llenbcrg. Pierpoint Bay Yacht Club, was a double winner in the fifth and sixth races of Los Angeles Yacht ( lub's Wh1tne} Sem·s lor lnternauonal Offshore Rule ~achts. ·a1urda) and ~unda}. The fifth race tor the ~ h1tne\. L'\ Times. Ltttle Wh11ne) and Todd Pacific senes was· from Los Angeles to Howland·s Landing, Catalina Island. on Saturda}. and the sixth ract' was from Howland's to Lo!'. Angeles Harbor on Sunda\ Seventh and final race for all four senes 1s scheduled Ma} 12 Hal Oa\ "<; Winterha"k from Bahia Connth1an Yacht Club was a double winner in Class A. but was unable to sa" e her 11 me for tlect honors. Overall winner 1n the Performance Handicap Racing I kct tor thl' Time\ T ruph) was Rocket. a Class A entf) 'kippered h~ ~1arl Alcl\H'1<.s. Del Re~ Yacht Club. on \aturda\ and Ra' agl· 1,l1ppcn:d h\ Bud Tretter. l ong lkach \al ht< luh 1111 \und.n ",umm.10 o l rc,ull'> 111 holh rall"'> WHITNEY SERIES, JOR <Race SI OVERALL -I Re,cnge. ~a~nc \.\ 1llenberg. P1l'rpo1n1 Ha' ) C 2 \ lllOf). Roben Butkus. (abnllo Be<it:h \ c 1 .\pogt>l' \.111t itnd Mart' Vogel. Long Beach \ ( CLASS A -I ~intcrha\\k, Hal Da'. Bahia < onnth1.in YC. 2 .\m:rntc Mel R1chln. Lido Isle Y(: 3. Bma. ( hoa1c-Ml·inc.· L \ YC . CLASS 8 -I Kl'\ l'nge. 2 \ it tor. J Roller< oaster. < 1oli,on <;, nd1tall:. long Beach ) < CLASS C -..\nogee 2 .\udauou<;. Mike Kcnnt-d~. I '\ YC • 1 Red l)h1ft ..\nnc i...ahk. l A) ( .. TIME. SERIES. PHRF OVERALL -Rodl·t. Mark Blc1wc1,. Del Rey YC 2 'vtirage. Mike Stea I ong Beach) ( 1 Oh<.ess1on. Weeger ">nd1cate. L.\ YC CLASS A -I Rrn.kl'I. 2 Mirage 1 Obsession CLASS B -I Hctana. Scott •\twood. Alamitos Bay Yl . ~ "Jutmeg. 1-vcr<'ll < om1ng'I. Cahnllo Beach YC: 3 Kto. Ken ~uJer. i"it·w1><111 11dfbor ) l Mesa's Neal bound for UCSB < O'ita Mesa High girls basketball standout Shelly Neal has signed a lettcro(intcnt to continue pla) mg at C Santa Barbara The S-8 guard. the 'ica View Lcag\Jc's MVP and a second-team All-OF ~election. averaged 11 7 points per game this season for tlu· M u1>1ang.s CLASS C -I. Ravage. Bud Tretter. LBYC: 2. Chocolate 0, Herb Halling, Seal Beach YC: 3. Callisto. Ulh Hanman, Little Sh ips fleet. LITTLE WHITNEY SERIES, MORC I. Spirit, Roben Lmlc. W indjammers YC: 2. Stingray II, Hamp1kian-lmus-Farrcll, California YC: 3. Malola. Washburn-Rickerschauscr, LA YC. TODD PACIFIC SERIES, PHRF UNDER 30 I. Anemone. Asher-Van fleet. Cabrillo Beach YC. 2. Wow. Ted Zellmer. Seal Beach YC: 3. Sunshine. Dennis Humphrey. C BYC. RACE ~. HOWLAND'S TO LOS ANG LEES IOR Overall -I. Revenge: 2. Victory: 3. Apogee. CLASS A -I Winterhawk: 2. Bnsa: 3. Mimi B. Bill Wilson. LA YC. CLASS B -I. Revenge: 2. Victory: 3 flambuoyant. Geoff Smith of Providence Colleare crouee flnlah llne to win the Boeton Marathon Monday ln 2: 10.SS. He la blddlnC for a •pot on the Brltieh Olympic team. Barney and Steve flam, LBYC. CLASS C -I . Apogee: 2. Red Shift: 3. Blue Jacket. Michael Kenney, LBYC TIMES SERIES, PHRF OVERALL -I Ra,age 2 Torch . .\I Geanng. CB'a CJ. Chocolate 0 CLASS A -I. Ob!>l'Ss1on . 2 Mirage: 3. Intense. Alan Rosenberg, ABYC. CLASS B -I Incognito. Tom and Doug Jorgensen. LA YC. 2. Caroline H. Lawrence Hillman. LSF: 3. Sp1ndnfi. Dan Feltham. Seal Beach YC. Kingman goes wild: 3 home runs, 8 RBI SEA TILE (AP) -8** In the lineup after mllllng three ~ wtth a tore teg muecte. Oekllnd'1 Da•J(lngman b'eeted htmMlf to-a CLASS C -I. Ravage: 2. Torch: 3. Chocolate 0 . MORC (Little Whitney) -I Malola: 2. Wreckless. ~.time. .. ·he tied 9'"'1 Klngrnen ~hit AG. Kading. Capistrano Bay YC: 3. Aloha Ill. G lenn • It t fun to start out thlt way, ftrtt vtllt to the ~ The Reed. South Shore YC. Aid KlngtMn, after .euaatna thtee PHRF <Todd Pacific) -I. Sunshine; 2. Anemone: 3 homer• and ejght Alrl Tn the Cnt1cal Mass. Richard Cale>. ABYC.. AttMtlea' M ~' L•goe vtctoty owr a.nae Monday night. 1'ttfMk•" ...... to__. ... An easy night for GWC women A funn> thing happened to Golden West College m the opening round of 1ts o wn women's basketball tournament Monday night -the Rustlers didn't play. But they sttll came away Wlth what is being called a 2-0 victory after Citrus College failed to make tt in time for Monday night's scheduled 8 o'clock game. Thanks to the forfeit. the Rustlers will advance to the championship bracket tontght to face a powerful Ventura ~uad which dismantled Glendale 9S-4 I Monday night in another first-round contest. The Rustlt-rs and Gauchos will ~uarc off at 8 .\t 6 ton1gh1. 11 will be San D1c10. a 54-38 victor over El (amino. facing Cuesta. which defeated anta Ana 58-50 Ktngmen'• htttlng and the ,...., pttehtng by &Hf Cludlll tMllped OeklMd mow ba tnto flrlt piece lntheALW.-t. "t threw Pat Putn8m tome ,.... nuty pttcm,a..' Ceucll lllid of .... ~Nng ltJikeout. It~ a M....,., rMy wtth Chit .,._. k>eded. two out Md o.kJMd IHdtng 9-5. ~on)Ulefour..,.._ Putnem .... fnOlllld .. bet • C-.. ._on tot hie tNrd _... But CaMll Pf etan.o to dwell on MBRA enjoys best season BOSTON ••• From Cl runner to beat m the Olympic marathon. "Mc:· he said without hesitation. Little-known Gerry Vanasse of New Milford, Conn., finished a distant second in 2: 14:49, out of a total of about 6,800 entrants. It was not known how many actually can in the nasty weather. The winning margin in the women·s competition was even greater and enhanced winner Lor- raine Molter's chance to make New Zealand's Olympic team. She finished in a personal best time of 2:29:28. nearly seven minutes slower than the world record of 2:22:42 set here last year by Joan Benoit. Middc Hamrin of Sweden. also fighting for an Olympic benh. was second Monday in 2:33:S I. "I think I will be selected now. I hope so.·· Moller said. . A qualifyina time of 2:35 was required to be eligible for selection to the New Zealand team. Anne Audain. Mary O'Connor and Oleny1 Quick already have done that. The addition of Moller means one of them will be lef\ ofTlhe aquad. Allison Roe. the I 98 I Boston Marathon winner. seemed well on her way to join.ina that aroup. She had a two-minute lead on Moller, then lll second place, IS miles into the race. ----------:--~-:::::---::;:::-:---.-,,..,.--.. Meanwhile at Saddleback < olleac. the host Gauchos The Marathon Boat Racers As- wc1at1on (M BRA) haSJUSt com"leted the ifCatest season ever of Weit C'oast off short powerboat racana. accordana to Bob Nordskoa. association presi- dent. for fun. spon and adventure. Uni~ otheT o rga1Uzations, M BRA conducts races for trophies -not money. Thu allows veteran ncers to bone their slolls and rookie dnvers to learn the ropes. said Nordskoa. But Moller su~ ahead near the 19-mile mark. and Roe dropped out af\er 2S mites due to a hamstring problem. Moller upcctcd Roe to stan fast and said, "I thouaht ahe was aoina to ao out and steal it. MeH Verde Ce11te1 2701 Harbor Bh•d BICYCLE REPAIRS Servicing All Makes And Models opcne'd their own tournament wtth a convincing 77.51 victory over ( ompton I oma Hines, a fresh man from Un1vers1ty H1&h. paced the Gauchos with 27 point . while Hcalhel"Estey, a freshman auard from ( orona dcl Mar Hip. added 22. H1neshad21 reboundswh11cE teyd1shedofTc\Shtass11ts for • ddlrback. which now facc1 the prMpecl of playrng undefeated Dcscn tonight at 9 15 The Arabs bnng a 21-0 rt<'ord into the pme af\er knoclong off< haOcy 81 -S I Monday n1af\t. Phebe L1mt'broo~ and Lau Jones ch1p~o 1n nine potnt'I ap1C'C'c for Ciaddlchack It was a season Wlth c1&ht races, including San Francisco. the Channel lslandJ, Catalina Island and Dana Point This was more r&QCS than any other powerboat assoc11taon has '\ponw~ 1n m3n)' years. according to Nordskoa · Purpose of MBRA 1s to asve powerboat r:wc-r\ al hancc to c.ompetc - "In my over JS years as a power- boat l'lcer I have never tttn such exatcmcnt and compct1tive desire on a circuit." 11.id Nordskas. "The cooperation amont teams. tfle mcch- an1cat creat1v1ty of crew chiefs and the excitement of :pectators hav~ ~-cruted pown-boat l'IClnJH a pon on the West C l " ··After I pasted hCf' I thouaht ahc'll probablr, respond and nm with me for a white,· added Moller. -.ho already h11 qualified 10 reprcsent New Zel· land in the ),()()(). and I .SOO-metcr Olympic nccs. .. But I found m~f ju11 movina 1n front. From wt point on I thou1ht the ratt WIS probebl mine ... 1 ' ~ockey hints pnlted Statea Olympic coach and .elector Ga'rin Feather-~tone &l•a younc•tera 901De helpful hlnt.9 about field ~ . . • " MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS Amencan Lffeu• OHiand Mlnnel01a S.altlt Kan .. s CllY Chlaoo ....... Texu Derr oil Toronto Clevetand N-Yorlr. Boston Mllwaullft 8alllmore WIST DIVISION w L • 4 7 4 7 4 s s 4 4 s • 3 7 EAST DIVISION ~rt '" .636 636 .soo .soo .las .300 • 0 1.000 6 4 .600 S 4 .S5' 4 6 .400 3 6 333 3 7 .lOO 2 1 m MlftdlY'I kWH Mlnnno1a 9, .._s 2 Cltvmnd 4, Balllmore 3 Oakland 9, S..llle 6 Chlago at New York, P9d .. rein O.troll at 8o11on. 2, PPd., rain TedltY's Games Ga 'IJ 2 2 J'h 4 3 l'h s S11> 6 '., Anelh (John 0-1) a1 Minnesota <Butchef '·01, (n) Baltimore (Boddlcker 0-21 a1 Toron10 (Alexander 0-0) Chlceoo (S..v.,. 0· 11 at Mllw•ukH (H•H 0-2) ,.._ YOt'll <Font-• 0-?l at Cletalano U effco.at O·Ol, Cnl Kan"' City (Gur• 2·01 at O.troll !Morris 3-0), (nl Tues IT•nena O·ll et BostOll (Ec.kerwv O· ll. lnl Oakland (McCa ltY l·Ol at S.anle CMoo<e 1-1), (n) WadrnHdaY's Gam.s Anelh at M1nnno1a, Cnl 8alllmore al Toronro Oallland al s.arrie New Yor1r. ar Cleveland, Cnl Kansas Clly e r Detroll, (n) Texu at 8osron, en) ... tMnal Lff9U• WIST DIVISfON W L ltct. Ga San oi.eo Ded9W1 San Francl.co Cincinnati Houllon Atlanta 9 2 111 6 S .S4S • 6 .400 4 7 .364 4 7 3'4 J • .273 EAST DIVlstON New Yortl Pnllaaele>tll• SI. Louis Chicago Montreal Pillst>vroh 6 3 6 3 6 • s 4 s s 3 7 .667 .667 600 SS6 soo JOO 3 ,,., s s • I~ I I , 31,-, MendaV'S ken ~ s. Hou"on 4 Only oarne Khteluled TedaY's Games o.ctears (HoneYcull 1·01 al Houston <Nlellro l ·11. Cnl Phllaaell>hle (Hudson 1·01 at Plllsburoh (Tudor 1·01 MonlrHI CSmllh 2·01 at Ntw York (Darling 2·01 SI LOUii (Anaular I· I) ., Chicago (SandenOn 0· 11 Atlanta (Dayley 0·21 at ClnclnMli (8.,.enyi 0-1), (n) S.n Diego (Lollar 1·01 a• San FranclKo (Devis 0·21. (nl WadMscleV's Games D.-n al Houston, Cnl Philadelphia el Plll\buroh J Atlanta et Clncln11ell -....._ __ Montreal al New Yor~ SI Loul1 el Chlcaoo San Dleoo et San FranclKO AMERICAN LEAGUE Twins 9, Aft99fs 'l CALIFO•UOA MINNESOTA PeUl1cf ' Carew lb Lynn rf O.Cno3b PlcclOlo lb ReJksn dh Downing If Wiifong 1b eoone c ScllOtild " Tetab abrllbl abrhbl • 0 2 0 08row"~ 4 I 7 7 3 l O O Tauret 2b s o O O 4 I 2 0 Hrbek lb S 2 2 4 • O 2 I Brnnlk Y rl • I 2 O o O O O Hetcher If l o O O 3 0 0 0 8 u\h dh l I I 0 3 0 0 I GHlll lb 4 l 2 2 4 0 0 0 RNCI c 3 1 2 0 •OOO Faeaou •111 3 0 0 0 J2 2 6 2 T .. att Score bV IMlnla lSttJt C~ 000 IOI 000-2 MIMeMt8 000 011 0011 -• Game WIMlno RBt-GHlll (I) E-Rftd. GH lll OF>-Calllornta I LOB~allfomle 6, Mlnneiota 6 28-8u•ll, Reed 2. 0.Clnc9\ 2. OBrown. LYnn, Petti•, GM ltl. 38-Lvnn HR-Hroeti (?) S8-Ptlll\ (41. Hrbek (1), Brunansky Cll 5F...:00Wl\lno I~ H " E" H SO c......... Romanlek L,1-1 s 1·3 9 l 3 1.aCorlt 1·3 0 I 0 Curll1 2 1-3 3 o l MllllleMte Smllllson W.l-0 t 6 2 2 t T~l A-.,n1 NATIONAL L•AGUE 0Mten S, Altw'Os 4 LOI ANC8LI 1 HOUSTO .. .., '"Ill $t 3 0 )0 0 0 7 I I 0 4 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 , 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0' 7 lO 0 0 • ' , 0 ) 0 ' 0 I 0 0 0 ) I ) I 0000 0. to It I 0 eanrf Cabell lb Crur H Nl\ltJfll'Y cf l(nlont 3b Glt'ner-71> Olfl'lnop AIMrtc ltnl'lcb n Mkotto TScott 1111 /HOOtn P Ooran!lb J1S11 S T...,. le-. ....... abrllbl 5 0 0 0 i I I 0 3 I I 0 4 I I I 4 I 2 I 7 0 0 0 00 00 l 0 0 0 4 0, , I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 1 0 » ••• ..... ~ .., •1 .., .. . ...... . ... _. Game WlnnlnG R81-Marshall (2). E-Garner, Sclotcla DP-LO\ Anoetft I, Houlton I. L08-Los All9elel 9, Hou,1on 9 28-Knlohl, Revl!Olch, Manha II. S&-Mar"'-'1 {II, Crui (2), 8Ruud (II. S-MScotl, Garner SF-Guerrero. ·~ HltHaaso L•.._.. Reuu s 6 • 4 I Her1lll.ar 1·3 I 0 0 I COiar I 1·3 0 0 0 2 Zachry W, l·O I l·J I 0 0 I Hooton S,I I 0 0 0 0 HeulMft MScott 6 I 3 2 2 tMddefl I 0 0 0 0 OIPlno L, l ·I 2 4 2 2 I Reuss Pllched to 4 Dallers In tne '"' WP-RtuSI. T-J;05. A-14,0SI. MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Amet"tQn Leque J 0 I 0 l 2 I 2 8ATTING (16 al bels): UPshaw, Tor· onto, .4SI; eracsltv. Seattle, .440, ltefnaiard, Cleveland, .419; Tr1mmett, De· troll, .423; Remy, Boston, .417. RUNS Hende<son, Oakland. 10; a.M, Texas, 9, Morva"· Oakland, 9, RICll<en, 8anlmore. t; Trammell, Detroit, t. RBI: Klnoman. Oakland, 13; Hrtlell, Minnesota, II, Evans, Detroit, 10; "•· Jadr-, Anelh, 101 Lemon, Oetroll, 9; LOPes, 0.kland, 9. HITS: Garcia. Toronto, 17; Carew, .,...., 1'1 8911. Toronto, 16, GHlll, Minne· sota , 16; Gantner, MllWaukft, 16 DOUBLES: Bell. Toronto, s. GHlll, Minnesota, S, Ea .. , 8o\lon, 4, G•rcla, Toronto. 4, Heidler, NllnlleSOta, 4, Hfflh, Oakland, 4. TRIPLES Helen.... Minnesota, 2, Lemon, Detroit, 2; Perconlt. S..tllt, 2, R Law, Cllleaoo, t ; Sheridan. Kan .. , Cltv, 2 HOME RUNS: Kl119man, Oakland, •. Rll>flttn, Baltimore, •, A Davis. S.ellle. 3, C. JollnM>n, Toronto, 3; Gron . Baltimore, 3, "•.Adlaan. A....a, l1 Ups11ew. Toronto, 3 STOLEN 8ASE5: Bernaiard, Cleveland, 7; Butler, Cleveland, 7; Garcia, Toronto, 6, ~erson. O•kland, 5, Trammell, Detroit, 5 PITCHING (I dKlslonl Cauam. Oell.. land, 3-0. SrnHhMH'I, Minnesota, 3·0, 81ack. Kan .. , Cltv, J-0; Morrl1, Detroit, 3·0. R Devis, Nllnnt10ta, 2·0; Nl.-ro, New York, 7·0, Celdw•"· Mllwaukft, 2·0, Gure, Ken· HI CllY, 1·0, Petrv, O.lro11. 2·0, Hovt, Chlceoo. 2·0; Su•ctlfft, Cleveland, 2·0. STRIKEOUTS: BIY'9Y91\, Cleveland, 19, Young, S..llle, 19; Morris, Detroit, II. Moore, s..1111. 16; Smithson. Mlnnuola. IS, warrlt'I, Oaktend, U. SAVES; QulMflDer'rV, Kan.as City, '· CaudlH, Oaklelld, l ; 6 are tied wltll 2 NafteMI Lea9Ue BATTING (1'·at bell): Van SIVll.t. SI Loula, .All; Sale, Ded9WI. ..Ull GwYnn, San Diego, .•IS; NllltlheWS, Chlc•oo. .400, Davis, Chlceoo, .393. RUNS: Gwynn, San Diego, 10. Schmidt. Ptllladele>tlla. 10; Matthews, Chlcego, 9, Wiggins, San Oi.ec>, 9; Crut, Houston, a. Carl.,., Monlrtal, • RBI: Esaskv. Cincinna ti. 13, Wallach. Montreal, 11, Carter, MofttrMI, 10, Mantlal, Dec19W1, 101 SandC>e<o, Clllcaoo, 10. HITS: Gwynn, San Olevo. 17, Lillie, Montr-eal, 16; SH, ~ 161 S a re fled wllh IS. DOUBLES: Carter, MonlrH I, S; Lllllt. Monlr11t, S; p.,..,, Cincinnati, •; OrlftMtn, Clnclnnell. 4. E1ukv, Cincinnati, 4, Wvnne, Plllsburoh, 4. TRIPLES. Crui, Housron, 2; Dawson, Monlrffl, 2. Gwynn, San 0 1990, 2, Haves, PnlladelPflfa,2, 21 a re lied wllh 1. HOME litUNS Schmidt, Pnltade!Ohla , l , Strawberry, New York, J, Trillo, Sen Francisco, 3, Wallach. Montreal, 3; Wu h· lnglon, Atlante, 3 STOLEN BASES Samuel, Phllede!Plll1, I. Gwynn, San Diego, S, Miiner, Clncl1'n1ll. S, Rtdul, ClnclMall. S. Wiggins. San Otego, ' PITCHING (I dtcl•1onl Ruthven. Cl'll· caoo, 2·0, Srnllh. Mo"treal, 2-0, Terrell. New York, 2-0, Cox, SI Louis, 2·0, SllOw, San Dlevo. 2·0, Mo<\Qe, S.n Diego, 2·0 STRIKEOUTS Rvan. Houston, 2S, SOio, Cincinnati, 10, Carllon, PhllaaetOhle, IS. Candtlerla, Pllllburgh, 14; Valtn2utHI, Dedeef'I, 14. SAVES: Gouage, San Diego, 4, Surrer. St Louis, 4, Smllh, Crilcaoo. 3. 9 ere tied wllh 2. H 1t1'1 schoGf Laeuna ... di l , SaMa Yne2 I (Santa aant.ra Teumamel'ltl Laouna 8Hch 000 lOO C>-3 • 3 Santa Ynei 000 000 1-1 l 3 Naess and Fa111.. France, Luke l•l 1na Hemmlne. W-NHU, 7·6 L-l'rence 2B-oo .. CSV) Ettand a l, Let Amt9et 2 ( ... M GrMdt TtwMmtnt) Esrancla 000 010 1-3 6 I LOI Arntoos 000 020 C>-2 ' I Folev, Matllew1 (6) and Wolf. Cabellero 17), Ga rcia and LYdlmen W-Mathew• l·O L-Garcla 38 -Garcla ILAl w11•1'1-24, Savaw J (AM!letm TturMfMflf) WoodbrldOt 3Sl m-24 II S S.vanna JOO 0000 l 2 • Cook and Mc,..., McOonelcl IS). Powtlt, AllOoll (J) and Abbott, E•lr... m w-<oo11, .. ,. L~ ... 1&-0eYls (Sl. Fle!Woa (W), Oenletl CW), EdllUnd (W) )8-LM (W), EC'klUnd (W). Hlt-f'rana CWI. LH (W), N\Vfflfly (W) SaMIMdt4, ...... , (Sanlil AM 1111 T....,...l S.ddltOeCk 000 IOI 2-4 l 2 tanning 070 010 C>-3 2 > Dam'-11 a"CI NleldonadO; Atencio and FIOl'e. 28-f=lorM (I I h ,. , .. di lt. Oenllill 0.-..... 1 Cs.Ml AM Ors T...,..,l Garelell OroYt • lO 000 ?-1 1l 3 Seddlllllctl 013 IOS 1-IO It I O'Nell, Vanct ()) al'd E .. lnota, Oelt.00, Ronano 121, LalWum (61, Da· 11'11«1 <71 and Maldonado. w-1.a/IOl'Uf'n. t·t. L-Vanc. s-oami.n. 21-~ <OOI. Wtlllem\ tGGl, Jorda11 !SJ )1-+fftla (GO) Hlt-Jordefl ISi W•tmlMtw II. SI ~ t ( ............ , .... ) W..lmlntter 002 Ht-It 10 1 [I ~ 000 IOI>-0 I 6 """""""'and LOMI Raddllft, JOIWOn (61, ,.,. (6) afld l llt, ,,.." (t) W MocN•Y L-«MOlff. hock_~f th19 put weekend at a youth cllnlc at Corona del 11a.r HICh School. Los A&amltos MONDAY'S "ESUL TS (42rnd ef ff·Nlllt llamtss IMetlMI FIRST ltACE. One rnlle Peet. Glols Dellon <Ratdlfordl 13.60 UO uo Touct\a Miracle (Plano) 6.60 4 tO Twll19ht PIMWf'e (Mueller) 7 00 AllO r.ceo· Timber Crftk, California Eml*'IS, Sk!PI Tic>, HoenY Mall• 1'11.oMY. 8oard BIN Babv, Alldys MaY. Time: 2:0S '1S. S2 EXACTA 16·9) peld SSS.to. SECO .. D "-ACE. One mile lrot. Laay L (Greoorv> 3.00 2.10 2.10 Hunltf's Karl IB1lllaroaonl 2.60 2.40 SWMI Jamb (Bal( ... ) 2.60 AIW raced. S.uv Siar, Padlk Hunter. Sc>artlllng EleQtnaQe, l(wtei Markenlav Time: 2:07. Sl EXACTA IS·4l paid SS . .O. TH•D ltACI. One rnlle Nee. HHven Help Us ICrohnl 4.tO 3.tO 3.00 8oats (WJlll•m•l 7.60 4.00 Sue>er Tad (Ratchford) 3.10 Also raced: Spicy\ Flr\t, One tor Da na, A L Wfflls, Liiiie 8ret Rullef, AndYl ~. Rockv Scotch Time. 2:01 2/S 12 IEXACTA 13·61 paid '30.tO. FO\MTH "ACIE. One mile e>aee. Jan Rlad (Todd) 42.10 IUO SAO Wvnna Nandlna tKuebltrl 5.20 3.20 Rich Rad (ROMll) 400 Also raced· 9r'oolldefl9 9W, Jo Boy, Trlnllv Hanover, Darren John, .Jeflllvs Lad. StrHm Flare. Time: 1:59 l/S. FIFTH "ACE. One mite pace Smooth Nllllit IGrundYI 11 • .0 1060 700 Dawns Oellohl (Lackevl 11.0 7AO 81a breeie (Balllaroeonl 6.20 AtlO raced l<•hlue Prl11eess. FrH S.m· Die, Tllrush. Talk At>ouf Lucit, Smooth Ginoe<. Fair Sl.,t Time. 2:01 l /S S2 EXACT A (3·21 paid II II IO SIXTH RACE. One mite pace. Slt llar Light (SIMll'I) 6.00 3.IO 3.60 Chris Top Her <Aubin! 11.00 6.00 Mailes• Hunter (81ker) 2 tO Also rec:ea· 8enevO!tnc:e, Jim' p._, Smoolh u Vttvel. Andvs Rale>tl, Awav from Hom.. FIY Jlnda Fly Time-2:01 4/S S2 EXACT A C.·3) paid s 123.10 SEVENTH RACE. One mile Pact 8ardwtll (,t,ubln) 10.IO 7.10 4 IO Smller1 Pride (Oe1omerl 8.60 S.20 Valentino (Baker) S 60 Also rec.ea: Avenger, Va Walled. M111er Noel, FrM Pour, Hercules Direct Time· l:SI 31S S2 EXACT A (2·31 paid S67 .0. EIGHTH "ACE. Ont mile pac:e Horlron Siar (Pierce) 6 90 S .0 2 IO Printmaker CN\cCartv l 11 to • 60 8elll Jolte <Park tr) 3 00 Also raced: MIOl'llY Matrix. Irish Fadan, EIOQuent Roy s .. Desert Son, Howdv Sier. AndY'I Lion. Time: 2:00 llS. S2 IEXACTA C7·4) Plld 1107.60. Nl .. TH "ACE. One mile trot. Pllev ILacut> 3 20 2.ao ChHrtut MooM (0.tomerl SOO Como Star (Wlllla rnsl HO u o 6.0 AIM> raced· AndY'l Meteor, Siar Hiii, Noble Arnell a, C K's Honey Time· 2-01 2/S U EXACTA l7·SI Pala 124.60 S1 ~ICK SIX (8·3·6·2+7) paid '763 IO to 26 winning tickets Cllvt horses) TENTH RACE. Ont mlie PaC:t APSltV'l 8rolller (Slffth) 3 40 2 '° l 00 Slormv Anacll (Aubin) '00 l 40 Buell FHtv CRatcl'llordl 7 IO Also raced Easy D V Tutor Cao111n J1mes, Kerr H1nover, Roseland Bret s1eaoeri1mrner Time: N IO S2 EXACT A (3·9) peld Sl6 60 Alft"11!161\Ct 4.106 Women'• soflbal HIGH SCHOOL 1Edsa11$,~0 (llrfal C>all Tw~) Edison 110 010 1-s 10 o GltndOr a 000 000 <>-<> 0 1 CerPtnter and 8•11.,. Rou ano Cot email HR-Baker (El " ................ di 2. Sall Oernefttt 0 WMdlN'lclet Twmement San Clemente 000 000 <>-<> 2 0 Huntington Beach 000 200 w:-, • O Bucclnl and C11urch, Fooo a nd Owe!\ t&-eoeen (HBI, Nllnard <HBI ~ v ... 1, Mus .... , .. di. W11•r-..Twww-1...e c;~11 ValltY 000 000 l-1 0 J Hvntlnoton 8ffch 000 000 <>-<> 2 6 lnnhell• and Hardin, Fooo •rwt ~ ""'"" Clw'l\"811 1, WMt"9r OWtllM 2 (Wes""' CN11tlaft T~) Wfllttltr Cllrl111an 100 001 0--2 3 2 New-1 Chf'l1tlan llM 020 1-7 $ 4 SC.Hldt. kall .. 14) ~ RMCI, Onkbofl ~ Ander10n w -Oavldson. L-SC.tndt f.....Oavldlon (NCI, Cllrr911 <NCI t NBA DlaVoffs First "ournd (a..t ef FIW) TtnleM's Games Washington •• Boston New Vork at Oerroll S.a111e at Da~s Allanta al NlltweuttM Oenv.,. el Utell WadlltsdaV's Gamet Kansas Cllv at Lalrtn Ntw JerstY •• Pnlledell>hl• PnPtnl• al Porlland TIK!rldav'• Games Washl1191on el Boston New Yorio. •• Detroit Atlanta at Milwaukee S.allle 11 Dallas Denver al Ulah Friday's Gemn Kan .. , CllY 11 Lallen New J.,.iey et PhlledclPhla PllOenl• at Porllana SaturdolY'1 Game• Bolton '' Weshlnoton Dallas., SHiii• MltweukM at Allanfl SUftd.IY's Gam.s I.alien at Kensas City PnllaaetOhle at Ntw Jeriev O.lroil at ,.._ Yorio. Utah at Denver Portland •• PllOenlx Tlletdly,A~'MGame1 (M ll!Ke\Mf'Y) 8os1on •• WashlnGlon PhlladtlPhle 11 New Jersev Miiwaukee II Atlante Utah 11 Dtnver Por111na al Pnoen1• Da llas., SHiii• Laun el Ken\as C11v Wadrne\4Yy, A$1rl 2S Gamn (If llKff.arvl Detroit al New York Tllur\4Yy, AIWI 26 Games (If f\Ket\af'Y) Washington at 8 oston New Jtrsev el PhfladelOllie Atlante 11 Miiwaukee Denver al Ulah P,_nla al Portland S.1111t et Dallas KenHl Cllv et L.alrtn Fr1dtv, A$WI '11 Games '" Meet\af'Y) New York 11 Detroit COMMl,INITY COLLEGE WOMEN Sadcl.t>ack 77, Compton Sl (Saddllbacll Twmametltl COMPTON -Duo0tr 4, Jonu I•. Miya 2, Harris 9, Blnot11m 21 To1els 21 9· 17 SI SADDLE8ACK -Gans 2. Ellev 22, Jonei 9, Llmebfook 9 Carr 2. LaNout 6 Hines 27 Totals 34 9· 13 77 Helltlme Saadlet>ack •2·2• Total touls . Comoton II. Sadditt>aclo. 14 Fouled OUI Bl1191'1am CCI Golden West tournament MONDAY'S Fl"ST ROUND SCOllES GOiden Wtil 2. Cllrus 0 (lortelll San Dlt9o S4, El Camino 38 Venture 9S, Glenaale 'I Cuu le 5'. Sant• Ana SO TedaV'IG- 2 pm -El Cimino vs Santa Ana 4 pm -Glendale Vl Citrus 6 D m -San Diego vs Cutlla I om -Golden West vs Ven1ur11 Men's toumamfl1t (et Mtftte C.tto, Monaco> Mondav's Flf'lt Round Slneles Mel\ Wll1ndtr (Sweden) a.1 Joell.In Ny\trom (Swtatnl 6·4, 6·2, 8rlan Got· lfrlea CU S > def Aaron Krlekste1n CU S I J·6 6·2, 6-0 Brea Glloe<t (US > def Paul McN•mN CAuW eflal 1·6. 4-6 6·• PaDlo Arrata (Peru) ~ Slllomo Gloei.1111n (Is· raell 7·6 6·4 Jlrnrnv 8rown IU S 1 dei Wo1te1t. F•t>ak 1P01ano1. 6·3 4·6 6· I, Mal Purctll tAuWall1) dei Llt>or Pll'n41k <C1ecrio11ovakl1), 6·4, 6·2 Todav't Finl R~ SlntMl Henrik Sundllrom CSweoen) dtl JoH Luis Clerc IArQenllnal, 6·2, 6·• women's tournament (II Hlttll Head ls&aftd, S.C.) MnllM FIMI Chris Evtrf LloYd CU S l def Claudia KOllde·Kll1cl'I CWesr Germa nvl 6·2 • l (Uova Wiil\ U.,000 "-OllM·l(JIKll Wlnl 111.0001 ~"Ina! KOlldt Kllacll·Hena Mendllllove def Anne Hob01·Sharon W•IPl, 7·5, •·1 (Kohdt·l(ib<h MafldtlkOVI sotit $13.0001 NHL lileYeftt OfVfSK>MAL "INAU , ............. ) ,......,. . ._ 0utoK 4 Mofl"ffl ), OI (Mrlet tied t ·t l Mlflnl\Ola ) St LOUIS 1 tserlet tlad 2•tl N Y lslanden S. We"'lftelOll 1 Utlandtn '"" Wll\ JI) l!dmonton t Cetoarv 3 IEdmotUOfl IM4• .arltt )·I) w ..... v·so.-Monlrfff ., Quebec We\h•fltlOll •I NV l\lenden St LOll't al Mll'VlelOte Ca19ar., a t t~ton ,...,.,o..- (W --.wnl OutoK •• ""'°""'"' NY 1•11~\ II Wa~•"G'O<I Ml!INsota 11 St LOii•• EdmofltOll at CalQarv HJLTON HEAD ISLAND, S.~. (AP) -C'hri1 Evm ~ bM ldded ~ ber ltrina or day ooun victoriel Wi1b ber 1evtnth ":::I Circle W.... zine Cup ~tie -she •yt the coun wtfaC't was decidedtj an her f&vor • .. , think lbat a Jot ot p&a,as don't know how to move on clay. They don't know bow to slide, .. Uoycl •id Monday afttt her 6-2, 6-3 vktory over Wlteeded Claudia K.ohdc-Kiltcb 11 Sea Pines Plantation. The No. 2-ranked Uoyd was top teed in 1.M $200,000 event. Uoyd, who holds the lonaat win-nina suuk in tennis oo clay. was presented with a Waterford crystal trophy and a $34,000 check. Kobde-KHsch rec.eivcd Sl7,500. Lloyd said her oppoocnt's pme improved on match poinu but added tbat she always felt ··comfortably ahead .. durina the match which tasted about 11/J hours. The wind gave Lloyd some p,rob- tcms because It shifted the ball.· I j ust kept tcllina myself move your feet." she said. The 29-year-old winner also said her concentration was relaxed be- cause she bas beaten Kohde-K.ilscb in three previous meetings. .The 6-0 Kohde-Kilsch may have had a more mental than physical disadvantage because of her ~3 record and because she'd reached the finals. said Lloyd. Bos• fMratMn TOP finisher• In lhe •th rUMlng ot the 8oslon MllralhOn Monday: MaN I. Geoff Smith. Providence, RJ .. 2 llOurs. 10 mlnuttt, l4 MCondl. 2. G«rv Vanasse. New Milford, COnn . 2:1•:49 3. Oomlneo Tlbadutu , Colombia, ?-IUO. 4. Juan G Zellna, Oalas, Texas, 2'15'.41 S. ICtld JOhamen, Denmark, 2:1':3'. 6. Marfil KRlholma, Nlallbu. 2:16:56. 7. Oa1tld M. Olds, BIOOmfleld Hiib, Nllch .. 2:17:05. a. Jalro CorrM , Colombia, 2'17:12 9. P1ut Belli~. New l.Mland, 2:17.39 10. Donald G Frffdll11e, Norlolk, Va., 2:17:SI. 11. Ronald Lanronl, San JoM. Costa Rica, 2:17:50 12 Oevlcl MCOonak!, Norfolk, Va , 2:17:SI. 13. Denni\ E Norl!)ruP. s.111.lrtl, N Y , 2:11:07 U. Jack P. Kruse, Chtrrv Hitt, N.J .• 2:11:26. IS. Rlche rd l'.,.11uson. Charlollttvllle, "•·· 2-11 ,,_ 1'. Dan v $11.arda. IO!llftldt, I .. , 2'\t~ 17 Ktn11elh G JUCllOll, Plll~tfl. Pa., 2.1•:!>7 II G«aon Nllntv, Laurel, Md., 1:1t:ID. It Mleuet TICledulta, Ill-. 2:1ffS. 20. 1'11\at'k It Slr.lnklt, W-tc:k. IU., ?:19-of 21 &rock Hl"i rnann, Pallo Allo, 2. If• IS 22 Jim HOitman, Loul•vlllt . Kv . 2.19:21. 23 Jukk• KaHlo, Oft P\alnel, 111 .. 2· 1919 24 T1mo111v McGulrt, O.troll 2 19 39 2S Mark 8osaaraet, Hunll1191on, N Y , 219 52 26 Mike S.ndlon Newlon, Min • 2 20'02 27 Kim Hartman. Snowmau Vlllal>e COIO , 2 20-o. 21 Loreto Arena Mo<iterrev MaKlco. 2 ?0-09 19 Ro0..-1 Muraoc1t., Ola Greenwich, Conn . 2:~ 10. 30 Joroe Gon1a111, Santurce. PR • 2:20-1' 31 Rooer ROOlnson, Wettlng1on, ,.._ ZMland, 2:20-IS J2 Norrnen Blair, Araen. N C .• 2:20 16 33 LOU Suc>lno. Coloraao Sof'inol, COio. 2 20'.26. l4. Tlmmv Downs, 8arostown. Kv , 2:10:27. 35 Tom Fi.rTil"9. Bloomfield, N J .. 2:20;36. 36. Tlmotny Wunsca. Orlando, Fla .. 2:20:39 37 LYie Per~er, Belon RoUQt, La 2:20-43 38 Pel.,. McNell Stony 8rooll NY .2.20 SI 39 Richard Lelano, Sookane WHll 2 20.S7 40 Steven Snover, Westlletcr Nlen .. 2-11'02 •I Cllrls Pllone, New ZHlend, 2.21:07 42. o.r1c:11 Hulme, Henrlella, N V , 2:21:09 43. Hector Cnavei, ~ltlco Cltv. MHICO, 2:21.21. 44 Peter Ooaa. LaCrO\s., Wl1 . 2 21 42 4S. Vair Karni tsraet. 2:21.43 .. Chester Carl, Gallup, N M , 2 21 44 47 Tim OoollnG, Omalla, NtO. 2.21 SO 4' Eauarao Heur11a. Arll9fllina. 2.21 SJ 49. J1mes HoPllfnl. Hlllhland Park, N J 2 221>6 SO Armanao A1oc11r. Miami. Fla 2 22-<19 SI David Cuft nl'IOl1. Allston Mau 11112 S7 Wllloam Hav•le nd Alhtnl Ohio 2'1116 S3 8rvan F•"rtnbecl< 1'1\ntrsv1lle Vt 2 2130 5' Garv 8rven T~ °"'°· 2 22 31 SS Rav Ctrec1<owsk1 MaDlewooa NJ 272'32 S6 Jo1eo11 su111v1n, cra11"on. RI 2.22.32 S7 M1cl'letl Whelen. Stettn Iliana N Y 2-2241 S8 Marl< Amwev Lancelfe< Penn 211 47 St Sh•nobu Mur al<Olh• F ul<UOfl• Jao1n 222 44 60 Jom 8t''• Al~Quf NM 121"' 61 Jolln N•l" NevPh1t>aM Coron C•t11 722.S. 62 Jolln H•lberllfaCll W1n111roo, Mau 2 23 14 63 Jettrtv Kumm Nla11are l'alll NY 2 23 IS 64 Ruu Pa tt. Columbo• SC 2 23 17 6S David Montgornerv Ron • Oa1< MIC:h 7 23 It '6 Roo..-t WitlOn KHnt NH 7 2J 17 67 v1ncen1 S~•n G1eaw;n M.cri 113.JS 61 Reno sum Roct.awav N J l 2l 36 '' Jamel Stronach, Low"I !\Mn 2'.2J:JI 70 Garv Wallace Nnllw N H 7 2l '4 71 Chrtll~ Geertner we" Point, N Y , 17350 n J-Kn•9'11 E~us Penn ,.,, so n E,.,..,, Mc"-" Ga'"""'"' F1a 7:23 52 74 S~ Eacn.n Welt Che\!,.. P.nn. 2nS2 75 Erk Wll.,111\ Pm.o.,.-Of\ Ptonn 2 23.St WOMSN Lon-alnt ,.,,,,.,. , New l..i.114 , 7' Jt 2 NllCIOe ' Helnflft, 8-1 Te••• t'll.S3 ) S••wt Gl'Ol~t EUOf"lt Ore UHt 4 Anne Hlfd, Pro .. .--. • I, 2 J1 I l S Tutt. TOI-... ~!Nanci. U1_., 6 Gatwtele A#ldentln, $<#\ Vallev, IClallO, U9·lt 7 L-Ovbclal, OtMlen. t-43 It • 9tl'bef a ""°°", HttlOerlOfl A\111 laf\4 .... l~.243-.U 9 5-ndl'I M. Mtwetl. TUC\trl T-" ~., ... ., IO L-M HolmeM, ""1 .. d4119Na H U >. 11 Lucia, G«acl. S,_ N\Clunlaln Ga., H US. 11 Vlc:tl l S lle1t1, Monroe, Wetll . 2• 14 Coast women defend crown p ASA DENA -Oranac Coua Col- lege opens defense of its cbam· pionsb1p tonipt at 6. apin11 if aft College here in the annual Paudcna City College women's bukeibd tournament. Coach Dick Ryan's Pirates arc the top seeded team in the ciaht-team tournament. Other pmes scheduled today found Moorpark and Mt. San Ao- tonfo mcctina at 2, Bak.cnfidd facint Oxnard at 4 and PallMna CC tangling with Santa Barn.ra cc at a. The tournament continues throup Thursday. UStrL WESTW.ltN ~ElllCE hdlc w L T Pa. ,. .. A o.tver .7 I 0 ms l9l 161 Art1ona 4 4 0 .soo 1l2 114 EXWMI 3 s 0 .375 114 ISl Oakland 0 7 0 .000 • 151 Gel*ll N\lc!hlean ' , 0 750 211 ''° OtliehOma ' 2 0 .7to 130 IS1 Holnton s 3 0 .425 251 211 Chlc:eeo 2 ' 0 '"° 160 217 San Antonio 2 ' 0 .250 .. 117 ' •ASTSaN COMPERINea A9llllllc ~ 7 I 0 .175 21112 101 NewJwMV ' 2 0 .no IM 114 flft!Yurotl 2 • 0 .HI 1 .. WI WMhl119tOn 0 • 0 ... .. 1" ........ BlrmlnONlm 7 1 0 .1'75 221 l1S NewOrleanl 6 2 0 750 19' ISi Tal'T\P8 8av s 3 0 .'2S 190 tn Jack sonvlllt 2 6 0 .250 167 "' MtrnPhll 2 ' 0 .2SO llO 131 Meftday'5~ Hovslon JS. O..land 27 Tamc>a 8av JS. New Orlean1 13 ''*'f'• G-. LA E..,_. al Chlc.lloo Nlem9f'lls at Jack1011vllle ~tehOma al Blnnl~m s.tvnla'f'I ~ Ariton• el ~1ton S.....Y'I GefMI Denver at New on.ens Phlladelpftla •• sen Antonio New Jeoev at PlttUlur9h WaSlllnglon at O.te/ICI ~'f"sO- Ta"-S.v al Mlc:tlliNtl M9stws ~ Wln11eu of lhe PGA Maller\ Golf tournament l~orton Smltll 193s-G-Sarazen Im-Horton Smltll 1937-eyron Hel50ll lnt-+ienrY Pleard l~RalDfl GulClal\4 19.._ Jlmmv Demere! 1941~ralo Wood 1942-evron Net\On IN>-No Tournament 19...-..0 TourMment 1945--No Tournemettl 19..-...erman Keiser IU 7-Jlmmy Octmarel 1941-Clauae Hermon 19•9'-S..m ~a ltSO--JlmmY Dtmarll 19Sl-een Hooan 1'S1-S.m SnH<! 19~H-n 1•s.-s.m SnMa 19Ss-<arv MIOCllK'off IM6-Jedl Burke. Jr 19S7-DOUG Fora ttS.-Arnold Palm« 19S9-Art wan IMO-Arnold Palm« 1961-Garv Ptaver 19'1-Arnold Palmer l~Jacll Nblaus 19 .. -Arnold Palmer 19tS.-Jack NICtllaus 1966-Jacil NIC'lla tus 19'7-Gav Br_.,. l,.._8ob Goalbv 196~Ar~ 1971>-ellv Cawer tt71~.,.rles Coodv 197?-Jacit NIC'llllUS 1'7>-T ommv Aarvn 1'7~ary P\aver lt7S.-~ HIC'lllaul lt7t-fllav l'lolfd 1'77-Tom Wa~ ltn-Gerv Ptaver 1'7'-4 un v Zoeller 1911>-Seve 8eilnteros '"I-Torn WattOf'l 19'>-<rale Stedler 190-S.ve 8allft..,._ 1....-e.n Crenlllew • ~Y• trl•ac-=• ·~ ""'•'-U... NEW Yo.ti( YANKE£5o-SieMll 0K¥ OMllO!t. ~ Sent KA1t1t1 Smith."'°'' sto9, to ltwlr M '""'~....,..,... Mo¥Cld ~ -.ec:Mm, ~. ~ NUht#lllt to C~ of "'9 lfltWnellOnel I..'""' P'OOT'aALL ......... ~ ....... 0(NV£1t I~ IN '*""'-.. c~ o.olMt ~-. ~ ~Imm\, <•--.00 ... ~.., .,.. ""' ..... ............ ~u..- "'TT'MU"GH MAUUllt,___ Jim ,tr'f'eftll _,,. Jll'f\ T a.ior, .... ~ Pl9mif Mil• """._..,.. ~ llclllt tfl IM 11\M'M ~ s.I --... ·--------...--...--------~ AJJ .. star lists ·announced NEW YORK (AP) -The list of National and American Leaaue players on the fan ballots for the 1984 All.Star baseball pm~ to be played Tuesday niibt. July 10, at San Franci900'1 Candlestick Parle ........ LMtiue ''"' .... 8111 8uc:kn«, Ct\lc,qO c11r11 Cllernollo, An.n1e Oe11 O<ltaMn. Clnclnnell Sieve Gervev. S.n Dleeo Onld GrMn, 51 l.04.llt l(tfltl Htrftende&, New Yen It 1Y I( ~OM. "*"'°" Al Oii..,..-, Sen Frenclw:o JHOl'I Tllclmoton, Plllttluf Otl ~ .... &IN Doren, HOulton Tommv Herr, St. Louil Glenn Huot1¥d, Allente • ltOll Onter, Clnclnn.11 JollMv Rn, PlltN>uroh ltvne Sandber1, Chleeoo Stew Sa•, LOt AllOele\ Mannv Trillo, Sen FrenclKO Alen Wllllna, Sen Dleoo TillN .... Ron Cev, Chic.ego Ptoll Gerner. Hooaton Pedro G~rero, Lo• Alll>Ml 8ot> Horner, Atltnr• 81N Medlock, Plll•l>urD" Gr•lo N•llle•. San Dlevo l(en OOerkf•ll, St Louil • Mlkt Schmidt, Phlltdete>rue Tim Weli.<h, Monrrtel SMftllW O•lt Serre. PltllburD" Oevt Conctoelon ClnclnNll lv•n Ot JU U\, Ptol1toete>tl1• Johnnie LtMHlt< Sen Fr•n Rel•tt R•mlrt1, Allenre 8111 Runell. LOl Angele\ Ou le Smlf,,, SI Louil Gerry Ttml>lelon, Sen 01990 Okldt Ttlon, Hou"on C.ICMf Alen A•M>v. Houtron 8ruct 8ened1CI, All•nte Gerv Certt<, Montrttl Jodv Devil, CnlceDO 80 Olez. PnfleoefC>hle Terry Kennedv. San Diego Tonv Ptoe, Pltt\DurDh Oerrell Porter, Sr Louis Steve YHDer. LO\ Angele\ OVtflttd Jeck Cler~. S.n Fr•nciico Jolt Cruz. Hou1ton Chlfl D•vl\, S.n Fr•nclKO Anort Dtw\Otl, MonlrH I Leon Our,..m Cnoceoo George Foll« New York Tonv Gwvnn, San Diego George Htnelrlck. SI Loul• Kt n Lt ndrH u•, LO\ Angela Joe L efttlvrt. PhiltdetC>hlt Jtff Lton.11rd, San Frenclteo Mike Mart,,.11, Lo• Anvetff Gery Mat1ri.w1. Pnlleclt!C>hlt Winit McGH , SI Louil Keith Moret.ncS, Cnlc.oo Jt<rv MumC>hrtv. Hov\ton Otlt N\4JrC>hv, Atlenlt Amo1 ()ti,, Plll,burvti Oeve Ptrkt<, Clnclnnetl Tt<rv Punt, Hov\ton nm Reine•. Monlrtel Gerv Redu•, Clnclnnelf Ptlt Ro\t, Montretl Lonnie Smith, SI Loul• Oerrvl Slrewbtrrv, New York Cleu<ltll Wu nlngron, Alie"'' Mooltle Wll\Otl, N-York Americaft LMtM ''"' .... ·-~.M919 c.cJl coooer. MJIW•ull" Oerrell Even,, Detroit Ktn Griffey, New Yori. Kent Hrbek, MJnnnolt EOdle M4Knv, a.ttlmon Torn PKlorell, ChbDO Andre Thornton. Clevtlel'd WINle Ul>Shew, Toronto SllCilllld .... JutlO Crur, Chice90 Illich Dauer. a.1tllT'O"• Jim Genlntf. Mllw•ulltt 0•11'\tao Gtrde, Toronto .... v ortdl, ..... Wlllle llttndOlc>l'I. Htw York Jerrv llttmv, 8oston Lou Whlttktr, Ottroll Franto. Wnlle, Kenau Cltv TI!lrd .... 8uddv 8elf, Tt llH Wadi &o991. 8o"on Georoe 8rttr, K•nat• Cltv John Cu tlno, Mlnne\OI• Dwt 0.Clrlcft; AMlt• Toby H•rrth, NtW York Ctrntv Lenslord, Ot kleno Vence Lew, Clllctoo Peul Molitor, Mllw•ukee SMl'tl9"1 Tim Foh. New York Julio F renco, CltvelancS A"reoo Griffin, Toronto Glenn Hoffmen, 8osron C•I Rfe>to.en Jr . 8altlmort Didi ~Aneeh Alen T remmell, Detroit u L Wuhlnglon, Kenu• Cltv Rollin Yovnl. Mllweukff C•tchW ... ._, Aft99h Rlcll DtmPMY. 81nlmort Cerlton Fl•k, Chlc•vo Mlkt HHtn, O.klancS Lene• P•rrlPI, Otlroll Ted Simmon•, MllweukH Jim Sundt1er11, Mllwaukff JOM Wat,..n, Kt 'lW\ Cltv 8ulch WVMG•r. Ntw York OVtflttd Tonv Armes. 8o••on Harold 8tlnl\, ChlCtOO Jeue 8•t1leld, Toronto Don 8avlor . New York Tom 8runenskv, M1nnew1a an... OewlllM, ...._. Dwlonl Even\, 8o\lon Rlcktv Htneltfson, O.kttncS Larrv H«noon, o,troll R ..... Jadn«1, AllMI• SltYt KtmP. New York Ron Kittle, Chlcego C,,.r Lemon, Dtrrolt John Lowen•ltln, 8a1t1more GrtQ Lu1ln•kl, ChictDO Fred LYM. A"81tl Htl Mclltt, K•nM\ Cllv L lovd Molttlv, Tor onto Dwevnt MurC>hv. Otllland Bto ()gflvlt, Milwaukee L•rrv Perri'"'· Tens Jim Rice, Bolton Ken Sln111tton, 81llfmore Gormen Tnomu . Seetlle Garv Wtrd, Tues Dave Wlnfltk:I, New Yori< Gtorot Wrignt. Tut\ American captures shooting gold medal "'\ CH INO (AP) -Matt Dryke of Sequim. Wash .. ~ ~apped the Amencan team's fine performance 10 the \nG\lgural Champ1onsh1ps of the Olympic Shoot10g Ranges by w10ning 1he gold medal Monday 10 the international skeet event. Dryke. who holds the world record in skeet shoo11ng "1th a perfect 200 score, broke I 97 targets 10 this final c' cn1 to edge Denmark's Ok R1bc'r Rasmussen. who ~hot 196 Enc ~~ inkdsof Holland wa~ third ~•th a score of 195. "Thi'> one makes 11 fun." Dr) kc <>aid. "lt psyches a lot of people oul. but I hke i1 when the shooltng 1s difficult " D~kc's gold medal gave the l 'n1ted States a total of Ii\ c medals -three golds. one salver and o ne bronze -in the compct1t1on that spanned se"cn days. MOC ll>llCE ACTmOUa _,..... ACTmOUe Mlll•U MAim aTA,.....,,. MAm aTATI mrT ni. loftowlng l*90M.,. doing The IOllowtng pel'90fl9.,. dcMr'll ~ u : bullntel eit: AACHITECTURALWORKS. 220 IARt PAK. 1000 Pitt! Newpcwt, luttln AYI., Ntwpon hect\, Ca. No 207, Newpof1 IMl:f\, Ca. t2teO 92M3 , A. l<Mem. too Pn Nftpon, Marc Andre' Lemoine, 130 £Mt No. 207, Newpoft e..ch. Ca. 92te0 20th •8. Coale M .... Ca. 92827 Thie bualneu II oondUoted by: an Thia 1x41.,... It conducted ~ an lndlvtdual. lndlvldual MARC LEMOINE Thie ttetament wat flied wtth the Counly C1eo1 of Orangt County on March 18. t984 ,,.,,., PubUthed Orange Cout Ody Pilot March 27. Aprll 3. 10, 17. 1914 1742-84 P\8.IC NOTICE ,,A. hrem Thlt tlatemenl WU flted wf11'1 tf'le Cou.nty Cleft! of 0r.,. COunty on March 1&, 198' ,..,,n Publltned Orange Cout Delly Piiot Maref'I 27, Ap<ll 3, 10. t7, t914 1738·M Pl&.IC NOTICE FlCTmOUI ....... FICTITIOUI 8UltNEll NAMI ITATI.....,. NA• ITATl.•NT The lollowlng 1>«.on. 8'I dotng Tile rouowtno peraona are doing t>ullnMI .. : bu111neu u AMERICAN RATINO SERVICE CLEAN TUBE COMPANY, 391' COMPANY, 12345 w .. tmlntter E La Palma. Unll L. Anaheim, Ca. Ave .. Santa Ana. Ca. 92703 92807 Edwerd Reymond t<llllan. 8475 B Dan L. Collln1, 1513 W Cubt>On EHi Peclflc COHI Hwy, Long SI .. Santi Ane. Ca 92703 lBeeoh, Ce 90803 Tnla buslneu 11 conducted by· en This bulinesa It cooducled by: a lndtvldual. llmlted pertnerlhlp . Dan L Collin• Edward R Kiiiian Thlt statement wu flied With tne Thia a111emen1 wu filed wnh tne County Cletk of Or•noe County on Counly Clerk ol Orangt County on March 19. 198' M111cti te. 1914 ,,.,214 ,,.1171 Publitnea Oranoe Cout Dally Published Orange Cout Dally POol Maren 27, Aprll 3, 10, 17, 198' Piiot Merell 27. Aprll 3. tO. 17. 19M 1747-84 1739-M P\8.IC NOTICE FlCTITIOUI aUutEll NAMI ITATl.MENT The following l)«aont are doing t>utlnett at· BROADWAY REDEVELOPMENT GROUP, A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, 3185 B Airway, Coate Mesa, CA. 92626 Steven Beck. 8 1 Oxford, lrvlnt. CA 92715 Thia bu91naa It conducted by a limited partnership Steven Beck T1111 ate1emen1 wu llleO Wtlh Ille County Clerk of Orange County on Pl&.IC NOTICE FlCTITIOUS .,.._,, NAMEaTATl.•NT TN lollowtng l**)nt eta doing butlnMt u : SUN SHADE CUSTOM WINDOW TINTING. 570 Slurg«>n Or . Coett Meaa, Ct . 92828 Tony A. Hentley, 570 Sturgeon Or , Coste M .... Ca 92629 Thlt bualnets It cooduc1ed by. an lndlvldual TONY A HENSLEY ThtS lllllement WU llled with the County Cllt'k of Orangt County on Mlrch 18, 1984 ,,.,,,. F2AZ31Z Publltned Orenge Coatl Dally PuDltshed Orange Coast Dally Piiot Merell 27. Aprll 3, 10, 17, 1984 Mareh 30, 1984 Pilot April 10. 17. 24. May 1, 1984 1743-M 1953-84 P\8.IC NOTICE FICTm oua 8UllNEll NAME IT A TEMENT The loltowlng person tS doing business as HAOCO. 1835 wn1111er Ave B5 Costa Meu. CA 92627 Ove E Hasselberg. 933 Tanana Pl . Costa Met• CA 92626 This Duslneaa is conduct!KI by an tnd1111dut l Ove Hauelberg Tn1s 1111emen1 was tiled with the County Clerk ot Orange County on P\8.IC NOTICE FICTITIOU8 8U ... H NA• I TATl.•WT The loUowlng person It doing business as CAMBRIDGE COACH COM· PANY. 2323 Elden, Cott• Mna, CA 92627 Carol Ann Shugart. 2323 Elden, Cosia Mesa, CA 92627 This business is conducte<J Dy tn 1nd1V1dual Carot Ann Shugtn Tn1s sletemen1 wu llleO W11h •he County Clerk of Orange County on Merell 6. 1984 F2A22t1 '24Cm3 Published Orange Coasl Dally Published Orange Coall Deity March 30 1984 Pilot April 10 17 24. May 1. 1984 Pilot April 3, 10, 17, 24, 1984 1955·84 1868-84 PlmllC NOTICE flCTITIOUI BUSINESS NAME ITATEMENT The loflow1ng person is doing business as ERNIE'S CUSTOM DRAPERY ANO INSTALLATION, 355 S Jen· nlfer. Orange. CA 92689 Ernie Lune, 355 S Jennll8f Or- ange. CA 92669 P\&.JC NOTICE FICTITIOUI BUllHHI NAME ITATEMENT The lollow1ng person 11 doino business as L & S PAINTING COMPANY, 1010'~ Delaware St , Hunlinglon Beech. CA 92648 Lindsey Bruce Shull 1010•.i, DEATH NOTICES r:=======::c:=====1 This Dutlneu 11 conducted by en 1ndhlldutl Delaware SI . Huntington Beacil. CA 92648 This buslneu Is conducted by an Individual L P\&.IC P«>TICE FICTJTIOUI BUl lN€H NAME ITATIMENT PEDERSO-N The tollowlng persona are doing business as HELEN 0 . PEDERSON, BUCHANAN & ASSOCIATES. beloved mother o f Janice M. 365 Wiison. Co••• Mese. Ct 92827 Brosnihan and Evelyn J Nell Buchtnen, 385 Wllaon. Costa MeH. Ce 92827 Boyer. grandmother of stx Th11 Duatneu is conducted by an grandchildren . great grand-1nd1Y1du11 mother o f six great grand-ThlS statement wuN~~~~~~~~ c hildren and sister of County Clerk or Orange County on August W estline Services Apr11 4 1984 are at 3 PM Tuesday. ApnJ f'242n4 d F Published Orange Coul Dally 17, 1984, gravest eat orest Pilot Apr11 11. 24. Mey 1 8. 1984 Lawn. Glendale Forest 2045-84 Lawn M ortuary HARBOR LAWN-M T. OLIV£ M0<1uary • Cemetery C remato') 1625 Gisler Ave Cosla Mesa ')4 (1 S!."4 PIERCE BAOTHERS BELL BROADWAY M ORTUARY 11/j Bro11d w11·, C"'Cl~l.t MP',J 6•;> r, 'Vl P\8.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI 8UllNHI NAME ITATIMENT The following pereont are doing business as K•ochman and Assoc1ttes 3107 Tr1ni1y Or Costa Mesa Ca 92626 Bruce Norbert Krochman 3107 Trinity Or Costa Men C• 92626 Jene1 Lee Kroc,,man C P A 3107 Trtnity Or Cos1a Mese C• 92626 Thll bu1ttne11 15 conducted by a general perlnershtp Bruce Norbert Krochman Tn1s statement was llled wllh 1he County Clerk of Orange Counly on April 2 1984 Ernie Lune Thlt statemenl was filed wllh the County Clerk of Or1nge Counly on March 30 t984 Lindsey Shuff Th11 st1temen1 wu filed with ll'le County Clerk of Orange Counly on March 23, 1984 F2A2117 fa.tnt Published Orange Coatl Dally Publlshed Orange Cout Otlly Pllol April 10, 17, 24, May 1, 1984 Pllol April 3, tO, 17. 24, 1984 1957-84 183e·8' P\8.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI BUllNEH NAME ITATEMENT The following persons are doing bustnets as EI R PROPERTIES. 2479 Orange Ave , Costa Mesa, Cellf 92627 Ric herd E F1ock 24 79 Orange Ave. Cost• Meta, Cellf 92627 This butlnesa 11 conducted by en 1ndlvtdual P\8.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI 8UllNlll NAME I TATl.MINT The following peraon Is doing buslneu u · DUALITY FINANCE. 5075 Werner Avenue. Huntington Beacil. CA 92649 Paule A Quigley, 4057 Werner A~ • Hun11noton Beech. CA 92849 This buSlneu It conducted by an Individual Peula A Quigley Rlehard E Flock Thia statement wat llled W1th'the County Clerk of Or1nge County on April 4, t984 Thia a111emen1 wu filed With Ille ,242721 County Clerk ol Or1nge County on Published Orange Coast Delly March 28· 1984 ,241'55 Piiot April 17 24 May t. 8. 1984 Published Orange Coatl Otlly 2041 ·84 Piiot April 3. 10. 17. 24 t984 ------------1845-84 MUC NOTICE FICTITIOUI BU81NEH P\8.IC NOTlCE NAME ITATEMENT The following persona ere doing FICTITIOUI 8Ul lMlll business ts NAME ITATIMINT JOELS FLOWERS & GIFTS, The lollowtng peraons are doing 10971 Gerden Grove Blvd Garden business aa Grove Ct 92643 CONCEPT PLUS. 16835 Algon• Sleven Mtek-4 Geurin 13321 qu1n Sull• 610 Hununoton 8-ch. CA 92649 Woodbrook Cir Gerden Grove Ce Lawrence p Swtenclll. l8846 92543 This b\Js1nesa " conduCled by en Algonquin Hun11ng100 S.ach CA ENTER The Orange Coast Daily ~ Pilot's GIVEN AWAY WEEKLY GRAND PRIZE EACH FRIDAY OF 5100 • NO LIMIT TO THE NUMBER OF TIMES YOU CAN ENTER! • NO LIMIT TO THE NUMBER OF TIMES YOU CAN WIN! • ENTER NEW CONTEST EVERY MONDAY 4 ~~~-(__,. DIAW111GS uc1wit1 Each Drawing will be for ... GRAND PRIZE.!!~~l ............... S J 00 I I P • (•Oil 1 raze ...... , ......... Znd Prize.!~~l .... e ••• 3 d P ' (Fii) r raze ............. .. 550 s15 510 HERE'S HOW • • • (I ) Enter you1 Social S.Cunty number. nem1. edd1a11 •nd phone no OD the coupon below Enter u meny hmea u you w11h. but only one tDlry for per envelope, pl1ue E.ch entry form mull be en ora¢Dal Each member ol your f4mily with a Socttl S.Cunty c4rd may enter by us10q • sepuate ebvelope (2) Mail your entry lo Orenqe Cout Deily Pilot, f-oc1el S.Cul1ty Sweep1telr.H, 330 Well B•y St . Cot1e Mete C A 92626 • ('.3 A winn1nq number will be pubh 1hed e.tch M onday, Wednesday and fnday In th~ Daily Pelol An add1honal number will be publ11hed each fr1day for SIOO WHk· ly Grend Prize 4 II one of the w1bn109 number• 11 ldenhcal with your Social S.Cuuty number, you muat claim your priu money by b11aq1n9 your Social S.Cunty c ard to lhe Daily Pilot ofhc. You will then be declu.d the winner and 1mm.d1etely rece1v1 your pru. 111 cHb If you wiD a qTUld prlae of $100 , •check UI that amount will be mail.d to you after you hev1 pr ... nt.d your Social S.Curity cud al the Dally P1lol for vanhcetion CS) To claim a priu, your Soc1al Security card mull be preHnt.d at lbe Daily Pilot no later than 5 00 P M , two but1ne .. dey1 after the number waa publl•h.d Any prtM Doi clumed by Iha d1tdhna w1U be lorleit.d (6) II 11 not Decenary lo purchtH lh• Deily Pilot You may 1Dlpec1 the w1nmaq numbe11 1n •h• lobby ol lh1 Oren9• Coaat Datly Pilot or your locel library (7) EmployH1 or rtprtHntetiv ... OT circulalon and di~ tribulon of lhe Daily Pilot or m1mben of tb1ir famiUN are not eh qlbl• (8) Tb1 Dally Pilot will be 10le Jud9e 10 interpr.tiJJQ tb ... rulet O.Cl11on ol 1b1 ludqff I• 1111&1. BALTZ BEHCt~O "' &MITH 6 TUTHILL WESTCLIH CHAPEL ,j • I 'II F2424n Pubhsneo Orange Cont Deity Polo! April 17 24 M1y 1 11 1984 2037-84 P\&.IC NOTICE tndlVldull 92649 S1e11en M Geurin H Jernes Lew, 14~5 W 214111 St . WAYS TO This sletemenl was Ille<! w1tn the Torr1nce, CA 90501 4 Counly Clerk of Orange County on JamH T Buxton. 2213 N l aird • SUBSCRIBE TO CONVENIENT DAILY PILOT DELIVERY. • 'J ~,.,, ) , II I) P ACIFIC VIEW 'i'EMORIAL PARK \ .. .,, , .. ,P,.., • "'4<Jt tv.j'" ' n.l(i••I • ( rrm.lf1Jt. 1 f 1 ti tr 1t1( Vn•!ft f)r ,,,. •,, ""' '' Br, r McCOAMICll( M OATU AR\' ''9!> Lag ,ne Car 1r.•1 i:ici l 19v,,e Be1c1 r ;i ·~;if)~' 49.1 Q4 ' ( TtttNG8 TODO 1 · car ---:--i. reid ,\t: l . ~er plants 4 read the ·-~ 5. lhOPP"'l -------------- Merell 27 1984 SI . Sant• Ana, CA 92706 CHECK FOR FICTITIOUl IUllNEll f'2A1•7 Thia bu11neu II cooducted by • NAME I TATUIENT Published Orange Coul Detty general partnership WINNING • CHECK DAILY PILOT NEWSSTAND EDITION ON MON., WED., FRI. The lollow1no persona tre doing Pilot April 17 24 Mey 1 8 1984 L•wrenoa P Swtenc1c1 bus1ne11 11 Th11 ttllement wu filed wtth lhl POUR GIRLS 177 C.C1I •202 2088-84 County Cletk of Oreng• County on NUMBERS Coale Mna Ca 92827 CA ------------I Merell 23 1984 Cnerme1ne Clerk• 125 we11 I DllDI irJie1m • SEE RULE NO. 6 ABOVE. cl\esttf •206 Anan Ce 92804 r~IC NOTICE Pvbllehld Orenge Coast Oe11y ... --------------------------------------------_. L .. gn Rapkin. 177 c.cu •202 FICTmoua aultNHI Piiot April 3 10. 1T 24. 1084 FILL OUT COUPON BELOW Coll• Mase. Ct 92627, C• MAMl ITATIEMENT 1838-8' Thtt buelnett ta conducted by • The following pereona 118 doing genertl per1nlll'ehlp butlrl9N •• Charm11ne Eve Clerk• Valley Oak Homeowners Auoc1e P\8.IC NOTICE This •••temtnl wu flied Wllh the t1on. 1400 Quall Sutt• 190 Nlwoort FlCTYTIOUa llUIMU Coun1y Clet'lc of Or11ng9 Coullty on Buch Ca 92880 NAMI ITATIMINT Al)f1I 2 1984 HerrlCk·Schw•IO. I 1 G~el The IOllowlng pel'~ la d()jng ,,.., Pertne<al'llP 1400 Quall Suite 190, bullnetl u Publithed Orange Coall Dally Newporl S..Ch Ce 92880 CA~LOS'S AUTO w ORKS. 1101 PiiOt APf'll 17 24 May t , 8. t984 Thll butlneu ls c:~ucted by 1n N Oat• 81 , Sanle Ana. CA 92702 20&9 84 in<IMduaJ CarlOt A Torr•. 1101 N Oa1• Herrlek-Schwal~ I, 81 . Santi Ana, CA. 9:>702 P\8.IC NOTICE I oen•rat per1neren1p Thi• butlneae 11 conduc1ed by an John P1ul Herrlcil 1ndl..-lduel f'ICTfTIOUl IUIMll fhll •111~1WUllled11111111 tne C•tlOt Tort• NAMI ITATIMINT County 0..k ot Or•noe County on Tht• tlattm«ll WU filed with 11'4 Thi followlng i>erlOfll are dOlf10 A1><1I 3 1984 County Cler11 of Orange County Ot1 t>ut•MN at 'M21U Maren 23 t984 NEWPORT CA TERINQ 71120 Publllhed Ort"'Qe Cout Delly ~,.,,. ~ Blvd Newport BHch CA P1101 APf'1I t 7 ~4 Mey 1 8 1984 Publlthed Orangt C.0..t Delly 2883 2039 84 1'1tot '\prll 3 tO 17 74 tH4 PELICAN PROPERTIES. INC . 1,,_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;m __________ _:,:113~7-::t4:.n alltornla. 1920 E werner Avenu.. r •3A. Santi Ant CA 9270& Ttllt bullnMt IS condVCllO l>y e Pot•llO<! JamM w11aon E•ec v P TP1o1 1tatenwin1 •H flied wllll 1ne aunty Ci.~ of Orange County on arch 30 t984 ,Mnn Publlth.O Otenge Couf Delly IPlklt April 10 11 24 Mey t 19114 1961 84 J • S .\ h 111 Portt•r ;1<f\ 1'-t'" on ftn~nrt.>. \nn I :.intlN" h•·lp" \\tth c1om£·~ltc pro hl1 ·m ... ;111d ~und,n "' You Your Mont-) "t·t·1111n fo1·1""'"' on Jrt'd bu ~1 ne ~ t rt•n 1b and opport unit ll''- Daily Pilat AND MAIL TODA YI C Only One Per Envelope, Ple._) My Social Security Number u ~-----~----------~ NAME -~~--------~~~~--------~---~~-~~~ ADDRESS ----------~-------------------~ CITY STATE ZIP PHONE D Pl .... •tart con••nien t home deliYery of the Daily Pilot. • . POUR _.MTUmn PoMoe UflcMI.._, ~ .. bl euc:tlOMd .. the ......,,. ..,, AClmOUllMJllllM PICTmOUIMfll•M lllO'nOIOPTM!w9MU ..__ umn•mPDT ._.,Arn rr T.a.-.;.... .,...,..,_.ML.I _,..TO~ fllCmt-•I NI CH'•Nll--..... 9'Lllt. n ,oflele o.pen"""''· aro a.nae .... DtM, ... A.M . ....,,., ,;:::.,. tfJ!to*.i .-.CW .. ~ The .....,. l*'llOI' II doW'Q YOU /4111/l, IN Dll'AUU ~A T.a. llD. - •· tlullMm ee: DUD 0# TRUIT, OATm ~. YOU AM •DIJAULT ._A ~ ~:u ~T~ The ..... ...,_ ..... .n.· II II UNW'llO ICHOOL DlllflJCT ..,..._ •· ...._a Apftl 21. 1N4. ~ ..... on 11n ....-~_..,,no ..,am. Of pt,yeiClll oondltlOn Of !WM IOtd. INSPIA!O TRAV!L., 1126 ..._. AOYAl QUUN ti!At.fH 8PA. UNLda YOU fAKI ACTION TO -CW ftUff DATID 1M1k1 t, V.,de om. !Mt. 1221, a.. 2M32 E Toto M., ., Toro, CA. PM'ftcT y°"" ~. IT ..,, ...... You TAICa Aenoef tlidou-..f'tOo" .... PMof .. tTANTON PL.-AIA A,Al'T· .""'4&.T' ...... 1191 .. 1atdayOIMaiy, ,.._ MINTS. llAMON 11'\AlA. ~ C.. Mil¥ ........... CA. MeN.ca.m t2t$O MAYMIOU>ATAPUeUCl.ALL TO JIMTICT YOUll "'°"""· OreocwY Peut Mendel'IOI\, 1130 NonMn MaNtta, 2Sm NOQ9-If YOU NUO A1it IXP\.AHATIOH rf llAY • IO&.D AT A ~ "-of lld ._.... ~ fTID. 1WI Mct·-. ........ ._ OMce ne&-a ... at .• ~ .WO....IMM. CA. m• -.... 'l ~ -"~,,....,. me69 In OMf'I Of IOCM cNdll ~I after a bid II aiooepWd, ~el pu(dw """1 bl f'9mOVed .. tM conc::llAelofl of ,,... ~Wey, Newport 8eed\, ca. monte, !I Toro. CA. t2aO Of TH& NATUfU! 0' THI UU. •YOU_., M lllPLAo t2MIO TW. ~II~ by 1n PAOCUOIHO AGAIH8T YOU. YOU UTtOM 0# n4I NAn.m OP Tiii .._,CA,_ O..WK.l.MlllJ,t-U•.,.... ~;~ .... ,~. ,rOjKt IOanUftHtlon ..... : llwcl ... '40, "*-· CA. trr1 ,. . --c ... Ml ..... J~ Smith Mendereon. """9 lndMdual 8"0VlO CONTACT A LAWYJfl MG C-1 fl I A0MMT YOU. • abOve. Hormtfl Mwwna On Mey I , 1* M tO'OO un.. YOU 8"CMA.D COW'r ACT A LAW· ASM.ITOS AaATlMIMT ""°"' Jclfw\ Mlrw. 11111 MeCMlu rw., ~ ..... CA._. OAAM IMS.ttia.440,!MM,GA.tl7tl a..RP.Drlk_._.,._ ~i1,uwr.oac.TtOM Tllll ~le QOnducted by: en t.. Thll lla1emen1 _Wfl llleCI with 1M ~ TN9t DMd S.W-. !no., YD. lndMdual (huebanO I..._, ~ty C.. of ~ ~ty on M ~ ~ T~ under On Apfll 2$. 1 .... at 10:00 A M. Pw.,...,,. are an,.... Pwr_.. Mahrclad lltaeHi.•. 11H2 ,.._~ ....... CA..., Office, 2H6-8 9w It.. c.ti ~ 911c1 .... '40, IMM. TI'I ..._ 19 A P f • • 1. 1 ~ bOY• H " bleak ~ 3 •• 2. 1 lqicile. bo'f• ""bledl ...... 31C1d.3. 1~. N(• 2t" bledc 8chw6NI, •. ; ~. t»oV'a 21" .,._. a.ra. a. 1 ~. bOV'• 21'' brOWft 8chwlfvl 10 epd, I . 1 llcwale, tioya 21" bleak Gt'to M~ Mardi It. 1M4 I ~ purtuenl to OMd Of TN*t r• callfornl9 0.Wll Mtg SeNlct .. Thlll lt~I ... 1-d _..,. IM ~ c:cwo.d 0ctoMr t. 1MO. • Nt. HO. 1M duty IC)OO!rited TrvttM vnder Mela. CA. ma CA. tlf ti ...... ~ IS NOTtee It HE.ARY GNIH IW Al "81, llN2 ...,.,,,_ 9MJ. ~A. .... County C.-Of Orlinol County on ~ Or.,. eo.t o.My 1205, Ir! ~ t37 ... p-.. 1t14 Of Md ~t to Deed Of Tiwt ,. Apft &. ttM Not Aptll i . to.1T.t •. tM4 Oftld9I Aecordl 1n .,. ofb Of .,_ coro.d on JtJttJ e. 1M 1 ~t PWt1 1 .. 2_.. County "9coldtr Of Or~ li.te no 5811Booec14121 P9 '37 Of tN ~ SctlOGI o.rtGt Oil ... ....o. !MM, CA. 917\1 n. -....... Oran,. County. ~ .._ 111111 .....,_.It oonlll9*d W: • COWf'llY a.ti ., Or-.. Cillllllr • by lftd ·•OUGfl lta Bo-Ml ... ..,.... ............ ~ ..... PublleMcl OrWIOI COM! Delly Of Cellf«M eaecuted Kline Otflclel AeeorO. In tri. ofb Of tM PllOt "Piii 11. 24. lley 1, I . tM4 •-.,. llNftH' Dl'IY'8. A Generet Pert WILL Aeeordllr ot 0r.,. COunty, C~ eo.ro. tw.in.ft• ,.._,.,, to • "°"" ...,_, o.n.r.i ....._ ,.... "OISTAICT", wttl r..,..,,. up'°· but 'TlWit ....,._. _. ftlltid ..-ehe ~ ar._ ~ .,_ Woril.man, 1. f llGyc'9, ~· 21" ted SturdM 10 ll)d, •• , • fOM.... ,.._ "'"~ HLL AT PU9UC AUCT N TO tornla H•C:ut•d by ANN C. HIGHEST 1100£A FOR CASH OR S'TANLiY. en unmarried womef\ CA~1~·9 ~Cl( (~ at WILL SILL AT PUBLIC AUCTION time Of .... In ~ money Of the TO THE HIGHEST 9100£.. roA Un11«S s-.) et In .,_ IOt)Oy In CASH. (payab19 11 tlmt Of ..-In tront Of~ 101 at 2tao l. ~ lewf\11 inon.y of the Unl1ed 11.-1 St .• Senta AM. ~ all rtghl. 11 tl'le north ltont 9ntrance to 1M thle. and Int-• C)Onyey.o to and County Cou1thouH. 700 CM~ now Mid by It under .. OMd of c.nt., OrlY9 W111. Sant• Ana. CA. Tru1t In~ PfOC*tY altueMd In Mid 00000 all right, 1111e end lntereet County_llf'ld 8t.t• deeclibed • conveyed 10 and now Mid by It "°' taw "*' the ~ County Cllr'll Oil e>tW119 eo..ntr on ,._,.Alt' I. M. 11:,.., _. 11me • ......, ~ '°' tM ...,dot• Metdl ao. ,.... -... bOf• 20" ~ lc:hwtnn. 1 c.onltect IOt tN ~ Sltotecl .,_,. -----------81da llfMll bl r.-.ed In tN.,..,,. Puibllll*I ar.,.. COllll Delly -..c ... • 21" be.di Cnllaer, 10 bOf• 21" ~ Murley, •, bo(t 21" bleca W•· em f!ytt, 12. I ~. glft't 21" ~ Oxford, t3. t lloyole, gift'• It" lllUe J.C. Hlaairl~t4. 1 llcYc6e. bOV't brown tlUf tO tpCI, fl, 1 lioyctl. bOV'• 28" bleca Unlwga 10 lt)d. 11. , llcycle, bOY• 21" lllUe Sdlwtnn, 11. 1 IMcyda, bOY• 21" brown Aultero 10 ac>ct. 11. 1 91CycM. bOy'• 2$" ~Schwinn 10 IC)d. 19. 1 Blcyole. glt1'1 2$" blU9 s.er. 3 IC)d. 20 1 9icydl. girl'• 2$" blU9 Defby, 2 t. 1 Bleyde. boy'• 28" bladt Crulaw. 22 I Blcycle, boy'a 21" blue Murrey, 23 1 Blcyde, boy'• 2r· tan Nl9Nltl 10 epct, 2• 1 Bleyde. t>0y'1 2$" or~ Nllh*I 10 epd. 25. 1 Blcycie, glf1 I 2$" lilV9f l(TM 3 epd. 28. 1 Blcycle. bOy'a 28" ldll"tltfled abo¥I, ancht'll be cpen-~ lopfl 10, 17, 2•. ~ 1, ,... ----------------ed and publlcly ,. ~ .r ... ,..,... .,., 7 ,,, abov9-etfted time Md p1w. ... u. a I R ff .. -fl'. Ther• wtll be I NIA dep<*t ,.. PICmllOU9 &UI I -quired lor ~ Ml Of bid OOcu-PWlJC llJTIC( TM.......,...,_._..,.. "*'" 'o guarantM their retum'" ------------•dot*'tN._Ot .. Plllla • ..,. OOod COl\dl11on Within .. ,A dayl ..... ...,.. OCM09M .. lltlM attar thil bid~ cs.te Ulm 8TAW AH1MA1. HOPfTAL. -LC.. PARCEL 1 Tri. NorttlMlt"1y eo under Mid OMd of Tn.m In tM .... of th9 Sou~ 200 .... of ptopwty tll\lal.O In uld County. tri. NorthwMt.ny 1as t.et Of Lot 19 c.111om1a cs.aer1blno 11'19 IM<I th9r• of T1act NO. 46e, .. P9r rn11P r• In Eac:h bid muet C)Onform and be Tri. t~ '*'°" It doing w.y, COrOM dill Mar, ca._. 1eaponetv9 lo thl c.ontract OOcu-~ea: 1"~ FlcWoYe ....... ..._,.. mtnll AEVEAIE&. 1770 Orenot AYI . tet'9d to 11bo1111 -... llt Of-.. Each blOdlt lllell aubmlt, on 11'11 Colt• MfM, CA. 9218 County on Jtlt 7'. 1tlt ,..,..,-corded In Boote 17, P• 9 ot M19-PARCEL I· Lot 34 of TrKt No cettaneou• Mape, In th9 off~ Ol 11\e 10522. In lhe City ol Co•I• Mela. County R«:«cs.r of Mid County Co\Hlty ot Orat191 Stat• of Call- torm fu1n11Nd with the oontract Mlfllyn L Tift, 1782 Pttaalm Or.. John Mltcoft ~ O.Y.M .. csocument1, • .._, ot the PloPOMd Cotti MeM.. CA. 92t2t 1232 Star11t Ad •• LAeuN 8-dl. Ca. PAACEL 2. All ~t for In· f0tnla, N lhown on a map t9c:Otd41d g1 .... and tgtMI, to be uaed In In Book 455, P11G91 48 and 47 of common with others, ~ the fol· MllC9ttaneous Mac>S'. 19c:Old1 01 Or· 1ow1no por110nt of Lot 19 of Tract anoe County. California aut>cont1acton on thlt projKt u Ttlle buelneM ia conducted by: an t2t51t r9QUl<ld by the Subllttlng and Sub-lndMOuel Thie~ W COftdl ~I lf1'J a c:ori11act1ng Fair Pract~ Acl M.ityn Tift llmlt9d P9f1l•lf'llP. GOYI Code Sec. '100 It Mq Thia ltat9melnt ... llAlcrwfttl tM JdfWt .. Wt .. on ACTmOUI~ ..... 456. 11 !>-' map r9COl'ded In 8ootl PARCEL 2 Non-uclulMI ap.. 17. P909 9 ol Mlteellln90Ut Mape. pun90an1 aaa.m.nta over Lot 35 In the office of the County R9c0tdef t>etno the common arN of aald of Mid County. Tract No 10522 IOI 1ngr•11. 90reu E.cn bidder mull eubmlt with County c.. of Orat191 County on rhfl "~ w MllCt .-. ... HCh bid certified or ~•·• ClleCk Maren 30. 1904 County OWtt of ar.,. ~on gfetrl K·Mlft 3 IP<!. 27. 1 81cyo19, rta.IC NOTJC( boY'• 28" r9d Victoria 10 apd, 211. 1 •------------ NAMllT•~ payable lo tM DISTRICT OI • bid ,,..,,,. Apl1I 5. , ..... 9lcycle. bOy'I 20" r9d Schwinn, 29 'ICTn10U9 ...-ea Ttie following Plf'90n 11 dolno buatneea •• a n,. South9Ullfly 15 fllt of and 9nj0ymenl, u NI for1h In 1119 the Nor1hwetttirly 105 IMt of tne O.Clarallon of Rellr1Cllon1 r•· Nor1heast9'1y 180 fMt of 1he Soult!· corded in ~ 13463. P11g.9 079 ot wetteny 320 IMt of Mid Loi. Ottiellll R9c0td1 8r\d 9nY am.ncl· bond In the form NI for1h In the Pul>llshed Orange C0Mt o.ify PU~ 0ranQ9 Ca.I Deity contract document• In an amount Piiot Aofll 10. 17. 24. M~ t. 191' Plot APfl 17. 2•. ~ '· •. ttM 1 Bleyci9. glt1'1 28" 1111wr Hufty 10 N.Am ITAT'RmWT IC)d. 30 1 8icycle. glr1'1 1i1wr Tile f~ S)9taot11 IH doing atEERS, CHEERS TO YOU, CHEERS H 8 . 7891 Warn« Ave . HuntlnOton BMctt. CA. 92647 R«lM Ranney. ~n Loyola Dr . not i.s then 10% of the maximum 1~ I ~ amoun1 of bid u • guarentee that Peugeot 3 IPCI. 3 t 1 8'cycle. b0y'1 bullneel ... 29" gold Scnwlnn, 32. t Blcyda, TROJAN YACHTS WEST. 12ol S boy'• blue Schwinn 5 apd, 33. 1 Btyfronl. Balboe 1118'\d. C1. 92M2 81c:ycM. boy'1 20" r9d Schwinn. 3'4. Alco M.,IM Inc: .. Calif. COl'p .. 124 1 8jcycle. boy'• 28" red Sohwlnn tO S Bayfront. Balboa lllancl, Ca. b Ttl9 Nontiwestwly 15 fNt of m9'\ta tM<eto. of <><•noe County. th• Sou1"9u1.,1y 105 fMt 01 the Callfomla the bldd4lt wlll 9111., into tM ----.,---.,.-_..-~----- Pl<>P<>Md contract If IM Mm9 11 ,._ ""'""" 19d, 35. t Blcycle, boy'• 20" blue 92662 Huffy. 38. 1 Bqcte, boy'12$" au-Th11 bull,_, II conducted by: a Hufty 10 apd, 37 1 Bqcte, boy'a oor~tlon Alco Marine. l4'C Morrll Pt Kirt!. Pt .. Thia llala<nenl was flied with tri. County Clerk of Ofange County on Aprll 5. 1984 · ,M.- PlJbllahed Orange Cou1 Deity Piiot Aptll 17. 24, May 1. 8, 1M<t 20&4-84 te" bl.at u~ 10 epct. 38 1 Blcydl, g1,r1 28' white Schwinn 3 epd, 39. 1 Blcycle, glfl'I 28" ted Raleigh 3 apd, 40. 1 8k:ycle, bOy'I 28" red Schwinn 10 apd, 4 1. I 8icycle. gtrt'a 2$" blU9 u~ 10 epd. •2 1 Blcydt, bOy'a H ' blue Schwinn. 43. 1 Blcyda. boy'• 2$" or.., Schwtnn. .... 1 blc:yde. boy'• H " blue Peuo9ot 10 epct. .a. 1 Bloyde. r:£'•• ...... blue Oeraller 10 ·----------tpd, "· 1 ... bOV'• 21" 9r..,.. 1 ___ Mt. __ tc_NO_T1C£ ___ _ Detailer 3 . •7. 1 B1cye1e. boy's ,tcTmOUa .,.._ .. H " b1U9 Schwinn 10 apd, 48 1 N.U. aTATIMRNT Blcydl. gift'• 28" brown All Pro 3 The fol._.._,__,., • .,. ...... _ apd, 49. 1 Blcycle, glrl'I 20" t.O ,,,_ft.,. ..... ~-~.,. •~. 50 1 .. ....._..., lrl'I 2$'' t>u9ln9el N """""'"' ...... ,....... g BEACH CLEANER. 2804 Avon . = Ward 3 epd, 51. 1 ~ . ..,____ BMclh, CL 92963 2$" blue ~· 52. 1 .............. Monamm90 Iqbal Qeclrl, 635 Bleyde, glfl'a 28" grMn nn 10 Ballif St. A.pt 102, Coeta M .... Ca. 'Pd. 53. 1 B1ayc1e, Qlt1'1 28" blue 9282e J.C. Hlgglna, M. 1 8icycle. b0y'1 Mohammad Ralhenot Haq, 1345 20" )ll9liow Schwinn, 65. 1 Blcycil, Cabrlllo, R-8. Sarita Ana. Ca. 92701 b0y'1 2$' IMck Cyctt Pro, 6e. 1 Thi• bualneee 11 conducted "'"-: a ~. ~•2$" blueSchwlnn 10 .,,. Qlf*'lll partn«ahlp 51. 1 . boy'• 20·; brown Monamm90 Iqbal Qedrl Murray. 59. 1 BlcycM, bOy'• 27" Thi• •l•ltment WN flied wl1h the bl.at Motobecene 10 IC>d. 90. 1 County Cl9rll of Ora0Q9 County on 81eyde. boy'• 28" black Crulaer. 01. ""' u 4 1984 1 Bleyci9. boy'1 28" blue Standard . .,...r ' 'M1'721 Allaheim HMll. CA. 92807 Thll bullneta II C:Onducled by an Individual '*'" Raoney Thia 1tatem«1t wts tll9d with the County Clertl of Orange County on March 20. 1984 ,,.,. Pul>li.ned Orange Cout Deity Piiot AP<M 3, 10. tf. 2•. 1984 1840-M ~Tn10U9tu ..... ..,.._ ITATI_,.,. TM foflowlng !>-'IOfl It doing bullnet• u · QUICK OUOTE'R. 9871 OcMn-~Mt Or . Huntlnoton Beecfl. CA 92046 Robet1 0 Pelmet. 9871 Ocean- crHt Dr . Huntington BMctt. CA 92648 Thll bulln.a II c:onduct.0 by 111 Individual. Rob«1 0. Palm« Thia 11atemem was Iii.cs with the County Clertl of Oranot County on Marctl 20, 1984 P'M1m Publl9Md Orange Cout Delly Piiot Aprll 3, 10, tf, 24. 1984 1~ MUC NOTICE 82. 1 Bqde, bOy'I 20" blue PlJl>llatled Ofange Coeat o.lty 8ctlwtnn. 63. 1 81eyde, 7Jflf20" Pilot April 17. 24. May 1, o. '"' ,tCTTTlOUI ~·· blue ~t 10 apd, &4. 1 . 2044-&4 NAm ITATw_,.,. b0y'1 2$' blue SMrl 10 IP(I. . 1 The lolloWlng ~IOfl II doing ~. b0y'1 20" blue Pro Thunder bullnen u · BMX. 66. 1 Blcycil. boy'• 28" whit• Mltc NOTICE SECO SEALS COMPANY, 1537 Huffy 3 IC)d. 07 1 Blcydl, ~1 20" F·IC11T10Ua =-·· "C" Bak., St .. Coeta M•M, CA. wMe Huffy 10 'Pd. 88 1 le, 92e20 boy'1 28" gre1r1 Huffy 5 apd, 9. I NAMI 8TA WT Wiiiiam Ja.met Scott, 1901 Lanai Bleyci9. boy'• 28" r.cl e.ai.. 70 1 TM lollowlng P«aon1 are doing Or . Cotta Mesa. CA 92026 &;cydl. boy'• 2$" bladt l!P.f" All butlneu u . This bual"9SI Is conduc:ted 0y an Pro r.O, 72 1 Bicycle. girl 1 29" EARTH & SUN LANDSCAPES. tndMdual O'"" Hutly 5 apd, 73 1 Blcycle. 26101 Adelanto. Mfaalon Viejo, Ca Wllllam J Scott, Sr boy'I 28" red Snyd9r. 74. 1 Blcycle, 92891 Thia 1tatam9nt wu flied with 11141 gl11'1 26" green S..rs 10 IP<!. t5. I Jon Cornetlus Van Brl\.fkalel'l. COYnty Clerk of Orange County on BlcyQll, ~· 20" 1ed UnlV9Q• 5 1300 Adami, II 10A, Coat• M.... March 20. t904 epd, 70 1 • boy'• 2$" blue Ca. 92040 F2Utl1 Uni~ , n . 1 ~. bOy'I Ttlll butlneat Is COOOUC19d Dy. an Publl1Md Ofange .Coast Dally 24" blue Schwinn 10 apd, 70 1 lndlvldual Pllol April 3 10 17. 24. 1984 Bleyde. boy'I 20" b1U1 Detailer tO Jon Van Br9Uk9'en 1843-04 IC)d. 63. 1 Sl!fm boerd, OIMr plutlc T,..._ 11ata<nent w11 ftied with 11141 Pt&.IC NOTICE 87 1 lk•t•board, rid/natural Tott: County Clerk of Ofange County on 88 1 Skateboard. yellow Straight Aprll 3, 19&4 Arrow, 119 1 Liii preeerver. hotN-':llQUI NOTICI TO CMDITORI ,.now Y'lllow Jim Buoy, 90. 1 Alhlng Publlshtld Orange Cout Dally Of 9Ul.K n.AN8'1,. rod and Kendor 2iO rMI. 91 I Pilot AprH 17. 24. May 1. a. 1984 (a.ca. 1101 ... 107 U.C.C.) Pr..-Ued botlle with n1t10 o•lde 2038-84 Notice 11 1'19reby given to cr.01- 92 I Ara extlngulaher. chrom9 Rf• l0t1 of the wllhln na,,,.O 1rans- St09 2.,., gallon, 93. 1 Ar• 1111· P\llJC NOTICE 19'<>f11) that • bulk tran1f., 11 about tngul.,...,, chrom9 Standard 2"" oaJ. to be made on. peraonal propeny ton. 94. 1 le. ChNt, 1edtwhlt• Pfay-FICTTTIOUa ., .... , tier.inettar d..ctlbed. meta, 95. 1 FOldlng beach chair NAMI 8TATIMINT TM namee and bullnMI ad· t>tue/c:hrom9, M . 1 Electric ourilng The lollowlno P9faot'll ar• doing dt-ol Iha lnttndld 1ran1fer0t1 lion. WIWITIM.,, 97. 1 ~ bullnea ... ., •. TONY HORVAT. 304 Marine tray. 1l1vetpi.1e G.M. Co .. M 1 NORRIS ENTERPRISES, 7 1 t AY'IOUI. Balboa llland, ca 92662 PtloM. brown tr1mllne Bell. 99. 1 April Ln. Huntlnoton BMc:h. Cetlf. The locatlon In Callfor™i of the CM*•. Vlvttar T• 003, 100. 1 92040 chief P9CUtlve omc. or principal Radio FM CUNtt• plaY9f. Uf,ltech Lanol E. Norrie. 711 April Ln .• ~ office of 11'19 lnttnded 101. 2 Podium mlctC)9honM. Shur• HuntlngtOfl BMch, Calif. 92040 tran1fClf'or 11: Sam9. Model 555. 102. 2 SPMkar•. J9nMn Thia bullneae 11 conouctect by an All othet bullneN nama and 90-Coax II, 103 2 SJ)Mk.,., Pro..,..., lndMdual dr ..... uMd by the lnttnded trans- 104. 1 Auto 1191'90 AM/FM c:atMtt• unc. E Norrie feror within tl'lr .. ~· last yeera Ptonaar. 105. 1 Equallur Thll staltmenl wu m.cs with tti. lut put ao far u known to th9 Audlovox. 108 1 Equallztr. County c1er11 of Orenge County on Intended trar.fer• are non. Audlovox. 107 1 Movt9 PfOjlCtOI, 0 April '· 1904 The name(•) end bull-ed-mm. 8911 & Howell (need• r-c>alr) n.unz dreu of tM lnt9nded tran1ter..(1I 108. 1 Movie protect0t, 8 mm Kev· Publlahed Orange Cout Deity er•: Mr. Merit l'iar1. 1000 Br19tol St 11one (nHd• 1ep1lr). 109. 1 Piiot APtll 11. 2•. May 1. 8, 19114 N. Newport BMt:h. ca. sneeo Atmatrlp prolect0t. Stat\dard Model 2042-84 That tM PfOC*tY penlnent hef• 333. 110. I Heim.t. motorcycle to .. delcrlbed In Olf*al ... RE- whlll Sti09i. medium. 111 2 •mt.,. Wlnrc TAIL MENS CLOTHING AND GIFTS ~--12 11 20 x 5 wood Pen-,.._ nu1rw. TM~ netM UMd by Mid uonlc. 112 2 SPM1ter1 5 • 12 it 8 ~TITIOUa .,..... 1ran•ferort et Mid IOcatlon Is SUN· wod YOOI. 113. t Hair ltyllr llectnc DANCE. dryer, Schick, 114. 1 Auto ater90 NAMI aTATl•WT That 181d bulk tran1ta< 11 In- AM/FM CUMlte Blaupunkl, 115. 1 ™ lollowlno peraona •rt doing tended to be conaummat.O •1 11'19 bullneN u: ....,.. Auto 1tar10 AM/FM C:HHtll BBR MARKETING, 3410 w . office of: Jllcil Arm1t1ong, ""'New- Sariyo. 110. I Auto l1er90 AM/FM MacArthur 8MI Unit I. Santa Ana. pc>rl Center Dr!W. ll'250, Newport Nonh9atterly 250 fMt of tM Sc>Yth· The 1lrMt 90dr"' and other WMl.,ly 320 IMt of Mid Lot, common dfflgnallon, 11 any, ol the -•rded to llUch bldd4lt In the evel'll of failure to 9111., Into Mid eon11act. IUCtl NCUrlty wlH be for. c The Nontieasterl)o 25 IMI of the teal Pf09«1Y described above 11 Sou1n-1.,1y 345 tMt of IN North-purportld 10 be. 2460 Fwt>rOOll w1at1rly 90 te1t of '"' Way. Costa MeM. CA 9202$ SoutllMal.,ly 210 feet ot Uld Lot, The under~'*' T1ustee di.. f91t DISTRICT r ....... Iha right to relCICI any 0t Ill bld1 or lo waiw ariy lr190"ltr11 ... or mfonnalltlea In any d Thal portion of the Nonti-ctalm1 any ffablllty for any lnc:c>l'rect· wa1ta1ly 30 l1at ol the Mt1ofltie11reetadd1euand oth9r Souttieutetly 2t0 1111 ol Mid lot. common CS.11gnatlon. II any, 1h0wn lylng Nor1tieuterty of the Nor1heut herein. llM ol tM Souttieut.,ty 345 !Mt of Said Nie Wiii be m.O.. but b«l1 or 1n the Oiddlng Purauant to the PfOVlllOnl of S.c- llon 1773 of Iha labor Code of the State of Calllomla. lhe DISTRICT Illa obtained from the Olf9<:10I of the Department of lncklcltrlal fWa. tlOnt the Qlf*'al ptlVaillng tale of per diem wages and ,,... Qlf*'al pr...,amno r11a 10t holiday ano ~­ time wonc In the locallty In wtllcl'I this work 11 to be perl0t rnld tor aac:ti cratt or type of wort<er nMd9d to execute the contract T"-9 rat .. a1e on file It tM DISTRICT ~ loca19d at 2985-B Bear SI . Colla M .... CA 92628 Copiel may be obtaln«S on r9QU91t A copy ot th9M rat .. 11t1a11 be po9t.O 11 me Mid lol without COvenal\t or warra11ty. ex· PARCEL 3· TM Nonl'IMSler1y Pl ... or Implied, ttgardlng lltle, 66.25 IMt of th9 Southweaterty posMUIOn, or encumbranc.. In· 266.25 fMt ot the Nor1ttweet"1y cludlng f .... ctiargn and expenses 105 00 fMt of Lot 19 of Tract 456. of 1119 TrvttN and of lhe tru1t1 u atlown on a map recorded In creat90 by Mid OMd of Trvll. to ~ 17, Page 9 of MllOell•neov• pay the remaining prlnclpal 1Um1 of ~ap1. r4ICOl'ds of O<at191 County, the noll(I) MCUred by Mid OMd of Callf0tnla Trull to wll $117. 101 02 with PARCEL 4 An NNfMfll tor 1n-int.,nl lht'90f' from Augult I O'"'and90rnsto bluMdlncom-1983 e 12 14% e>et annum u mon wllh Ottl9rl OW/I lhe fOllowlng pr<>Vld9d In Uld notll(•I plu• all pc>r1ton1 of Loi 19 of Tract 45e. u COlll. charges and any and all 90- llhOwn on a map rteorded In 8oo6c va/\C411 17. Pllg.9 9 ol MlacellaMOUI Mapt. The beneficiary uno.r 18ld ()Md job .... It lhall be mandatory upon the CONTRACTOR to whOfn the COA· tract ii -ard9d. end Ul)Ofl any eut>- con11ac1or unes. IUCh CONTAAC· TOR. lo pey not .... ttian ll'le Mid IC)Clfled ratea lO all w<>n!lf'S IO'\• ~ by th9m In the axlCUllon of r««dl ol .Ofane-County, Cali-Ilusl i>etato1Dte..aucuted and lomla. d9ectlbed u lolloWS dellwred to the unCSer11gned • Wl'lt· TM NorlhwMter1y 15 ,_.of the Ian o.ctwatlon of Oelault and 0.. Soulheaat"'1y 185 fMt of the Noni'!· rnand tor SaHI. and wrnttn Notlee ol Mater1y 120 IMt of IM South· Default and Election to s.tl The MSllf'ly 320 fMt. the Nor1hMlterty und9rllgned cauMd aald· Nottc9 of 25 fMt of the Nonhwesteny •5 fMt Oelaull and Election 10 Sell to be of tM Southwesterly 165 fMI of the recorded In the county whet• the Souttiweat9'1y 345 feet, the NOfth· real pr<>99'1Y IS located the oont1act. eul9'1y 12.50 feet of the South-DATE March 22. 1984 MSlerly 345 IMt of NorthMSter1y CALIFORNIA GENERAL MORT- 45 IHI of lhe Soul11Mst9'1y 210 GAGE SERVICE. INC No bldd• may withdrew any bid for • petlod of for1y·ftve (45) dll)'I alter the dlle Mt l0t th9 ~ of bid• fMI. and 1he NorthwMt9'1y 30 fMI 40 I wnt 24ttl StrMt of the Southeal19'1y 210 fMt; ex· National City. CA 92050 c.pt ttier1from the South-ta<ty Ptione (019) 470.5370 A peymer11 bond and • '* · formance bond will be ,.quired pttor to exCM:utlon ol the contract and atiall bl In Iha form Mt forth In 345 IM1 11 Hid Trustee. the cont1act docum41nta. Pursuant to S.Ctlon 4590 of the Oov.,nment Code of the State of Cahforn1a. t1141 contract wlll contain provtllon• permitting 11'19 auccessful TM 1lreet addteu and oth9r By John W Brock common dffignatlon. II any, of the Vice Prealden1 real pr099fly described above 11 Publilhed 01ange Coa11 Dally Piiot purpc>rled 10 be· 2030 I Kllne Drtve. Aprll 3 10 17 19&• 1&66-&4 bidder to 1Ub1t11uta NCUrltlee tor ---1111---IC_W\_l-IC_E...--.-.-.. 1111y mc>My1 withheld t>y the OIS-Sa111a Ana Heighll. CA 92707 The unde<slgned dlac4a;m1 any llabillty IOI any 1ncorrectM11 ol the 1t1Mt add1es1 and olh9r common cie.tgnatlon. II any, 91\0wn M<eln Seid 181e will be m90e. but wtthout COV9nant M warranty ax· press or 1mc>1led. r90ardlng title, poueulon, Of 9"CUmbrancn, to pay the r9malnlng prlnc1pa1 aum of tl'le noll(I) se<:Yrtld by uld OMd of Trull. wilt! lnterell ttlefeon. u provided In said no11(11. advance&. II any. under the tClf'mt of Hid D9ed of Trust lees. chargn and e•-penaes ol the TruSlee and ol the trusts c1eated by uld Deed of Trust The total amOYnt ol 11'19 unpald balance ol the ol)Ugauon eec;u1ed by the property to be aold and reuonab.. Mtl~ttld costa. e•- PlflMS end advllllOll at the lime of tti. lnltlal publication of the Notice of Sale 11 S ta2,sa.4.0$. The t>eneflc:lary under aald Deed of Tru11 h9retofore axtculed and dellV9red to lhe underligned a wtlt· ,.,, O.Clar1t1on or default and 0.. mand for Sale. and • wrlltel'l Notice of O.fMlll and ElecllOfl to S9li The ulld•llQned cauM<I l8ld Notice of Oelault and Elletlon to S... to be recorded In Ille county wtlw• the r .. I Pfoc:>«lY II located Oat• Aprll 6, 19&4 Calwtd• Trust Deed S9N~. Inc. U TrultM 2130 E ollh St . Sulla 107. Santa Ana. CA 92705 (7 1') 953·5610 By DI~ C.,ltOn, TrullM Sale omc:. Pubflatled Oranqe Cout Dally Piiot AptU 17, 24. May 1, 1904 20e&-84 '"UU\. nu TRICT to enaure performance under -----K-.,-... ------th9 contract Governing Boerd °"ANGIE COUNTY By Dorothy Harwy FllMr. C PM MUMICIPAl. COUtltT PurcttNlno Olr.ctor CENT"AL ORANGI! COUNTY Pu1>1111led 01at191 Cout Dally P1to1 100 CMc Centw Dftfe W•t April 10 17 198.4 Senta Ana, CA. t2701 t981-04 Pltjntlll CENTURY ·NATIONAL INSURANCE COMP"NV. aal------------ Subrogee 01 FIRST INTERSTATE Pt&.IC NOTICE BANK 1------------0efel'ldanl. JOSEPH CHARLES NOTICE TO CH.DITORI WILLIAMS ARTHUR LEE BUNCH Of IN'T£NTION TO ANGELINE ASPEN and DOES I TitAldfEJt IN 9UUC through 25. 1'1()1ullve AT PUlllJC AUCTK* c ... No 159552 Nolle. II hereby glV9n to Iha aUMMONa ON COMt'UINT c1ectllor1 of Fold9r R9pafr Servtce, NOTICl!I You h•V• been au.d. Tran1feror(1). wtio .. bu1fneN •O· Tiie covrt may d.elcN 9gtfnat you dr"' ls 1005 Brlolo. City of Coeta without ,_ blfng tt..rd Uftl9H Meea. County ol Orange, Slate of you reeponcf wtttlln JO deya. ~ CaJll0tnl1 1t11t a bulk tranaf• ii tM lftfotm•llon b9tow. about to be made at Public Auction 11 you will\ to Mell 11141 advice ol of of p1operty localtld It Muta< an auorney 1n ttil1 mattClf'. you Auc:11on. 2075'"' Newpon Blvd .. atiould do ao promplly so that your Coeta Meta. CA . County of Or· written re1PonM. If any, may be ange. State ol Calllornla 1119d on time Said property 11 d11<:rlbed In o-n- AVllOIUlled tie 11do deman-aral u Machine of that Repair s.r .. daCS. El tribuma, lede deddlf con-vice bullMU known u FOl<l9r R• tra Ud . .an wdl9nde a menoe .,. pa11 Setvice Ud. r"ponda denlro de JO cM-.. Auction will be conoucted by LM 11 lntomu~clon qw Mg..,.. Rudy L1rk1n LicenM • 115. Aue· tt rou wleh 10 Mel the .ctYlce of 11oneer. on tt>e 30 d1y or Apr11. 1984. 1n 1ttorner In Ihle mettet, you at 7 o'clocil P M . 11 2075'"' New- ehoukt do eo Pf'omplty eo ltlet your Po''· Colla Mesa, County 01 Ot- wrltteft ntepOftM. tt any, mar b9 ange. State of Calllornla meet on ttme. The le<m• ol the Sale will bl cUh II U.ted deeee eotkltar el COft-So tar as 11 known 10 tM Aue· Mfo de un abof.CSO en Nte ..u,.. tlOOMr all bu11neu na,,_ and ad· to, d•berl• tuce rlo In-d1esMs uMCI by the Transf.,Of11) ITMdtManMnt .. de .... --. 9U IOI the lhrN v-ar• I.le Same ~ta .-crti.. al Mr atgvn.. Dated Aprll t6. i9a• pwde .., Nglttrede a tlempo. Rudy Larkin. "uctlonM< 1-TO THI MFINOANT: A ctvll Pubhlh9<1 Ore~ Co .. 1 Dally Pllol compWnt Ml been Ned by the April 17 19&• casNtta SPS, 117 1 Auto lter90 CA. 92704 Beech, Ca. 92880. on or all., Mey 1. AM/FM c:uetttl auto revene. 118 J T"·-...... 07 ...._ 1984 P\llLIC NOTICE 1 Equallz:w. Craig V505. 119 t Tim· onn ......... ,__...,,, 11 K .. .,.. This bulk transfer Is not aub)ect to ------------ palntlft .... n•I you. tt r~ Wlefl to 2083-34 defend thle le'#9Ull, you muet, within JO d•yt after 1t111 aummona 1------------...... light Karc:t..cil. 120. 1 AC motor •Ion. Costa M..a. CA 92828 Calllornla Uniform Commercial "CTITIOUI •UllNEll ;Y'ricnronou1 •/, horM Ellnoo. 12t. 1 1w:ir~ bualn911 J~ oonducted by· a COCS. s.ctlon 0106 NAMI! ITATIMINT AC motor 1ynctironou1 •1, horM Jo'h,, ~''l':"evr p. The name end addr ... of the per· The foUowlng pertona era dolng Ellnoo. 122 1 AC motor synct11on-Thia llattm9'\t waa flied with th9 ton With wflom ctalma m1y be meet buslneaa 11 out 'I• hotM Ellnco. 123. 1 AC mot0t County Clerk of Otano-County on Is JllCk Arm1trong, 260 Newpon Aurora Engineering Serv1<:es U 3 eynct1ronou1 •1, tiorae Ellnco, 124 1 March 29• 19&4 Center Dr • •250, Newport e.acri. O H1m11ton Ave Cos11 Mesa Ce AC motor aync:tironout "• l'lorN nmeo ca 92880 and the last day IOI ming 92627 Ellneo. 126 1 Black auto t>r1 BMS d•lm1 by any cr.Oltor llhall be Aprll Leo WOOd. 414-B Hamilton "v•. 126. 1 Cal<:Ulator. el9Clrlc belOe Publllhld <><•noe Colll Dally 30 1984 at 5·00 Pm wflklh 11 the Coste M .... Ca 92027 Monrot1 1220, 127. 1 AM/FM Piiot APtll lO, 17• 24• May 1· t9tl• builneN day. bef«e the con1um-Thta bu11ne11 is conducted by an ca1H1t1 pl1yer. PanHonlc RX 1956'84 mallon data apeclfled lbOve 1nd1v1dual 5010. 128 1 Cuutte r•· Dated April 12. 1984 L Wood cord9r/pleyer Sony. 129. 1 AM/FM P'tllfC NOTICE MARK HART. Tti1111atement w11 filed w11ti lhe rtldlo c:a1M1te Sanyo. 130 Mii-lnltndect ttantfClf'M County Cl9ftt of 01ao09 County on ce41aM<>u• 1>ag1 and back pack ~TrT10UI .,...... Pul>lllhed Orange Coall Dally Apr113 1904 131 1 LlohttcQPI, Paneeonlc:. t32 ...,_ ITATl....-T Piiot Af>rll 17 19M 1"2~ I Bo• wllh 12 usontld CNMll• The fotlowlno !>-'IOfl II dolno 2091-84 Published Orange COHI Dally tapn, 133 17 Alaorted c: ....... bullnetl.. ------------Pilot Aprll 17, 24. May 1, 8, t911• tapn, 13ol 1 Watch. man'• white S.B TOURS. 13292 Euclid St.. Pt&.IC NOTICE 2040-84 • tMtal Norwood c:eMndar. 135 1 Gard9n GroV9, CA 92043 Watch, man'• y.i1ow l'Mtal Ntllonlc: John Mc Nealay. 9900 La c:alendat. 138 1 Watefl. man·1 wtllte Alameda Ave , Fountain Valley. CA metal CU60 c.iender. t37 1 Wttch 9270& man'• wN1• metal 11.,,.11, 138 t Thi. bullneas 11 conducted by an Wateh. man'• Y9flOW metal Httlt>roe lndMdual calendar. 139. t Watch, men'• Y91· John McNMtey low metal Tl"'9k Olallnd.,, t4(). t Thia 11a1em.nt wa1 filed with the C4712 NOTICI! TO "MOHi !NffMaffO IN THI P\ll.IC NOTICE llTAff Of Jot4ANMA C .. 12 M. OUI• IUPl9"0fll COUftT O' Notlee 11 h.,eby given To •II I*· CAUf'ORNIA, COUNTY eon1 lnt.,•lled, wheth9r U cr9dl· M LOI ANQILla 11 served on you Ille With tt111 court a written reaponae to the compl1Jnt Ml.IC NOTICE Unless YOY do. VOY' default Wiii be flCTITIOUI 8UllNlll entered on appllcatton ol tile p1a1n-NAME IT A TtMENT 1111 1nd 1111s court m1v enle< • fhe lollow1ng pe<son •• d<><ng 1udgem901 against yOY IOI tile retoel 1>u11ness as demanded 1n tt>e complllnt wtiicll ORANGE COUNTY X RAV CON· could result In gernl1hment ol SUl TANT S 24372 Htllv1ew Or wages. taking ol money or properly L11gune Niguel Calil 92677 or other rallel reQuas1ed In lhe com-Sandri Ay1n 2o&372 Hiiiview 01 pt1lnt Laguna Niguel C•lll 92671 Dated July 6 t963 Tt1111>usmess Is conducted by 1n ROBERT B KUHEl Clerk lndlv•Oual By VIRGINIA BACKELMAN ()epy-Sandra Ryan ty T1>1s 11a1em.nt was ltlt!Cl "'''" lt>e WA .. MN A. HYE" lcounty Cieri< 01 Orang41 Covnty on 12200 lplvan ltrM.,, It•. 2tS IMar 22 t984 Norlll Hottywood, CA. t1IOI I F241MI Pubhlh90 Orange Coast Dally Pilot Publl1ti9d Or1ng1 C:oeal Delly Aprll 3 10 17 24 t984 Pllol Aprll 10 17 ~· Ml) t t98o& 18•7·&• 1936·64 Pt&.IC NOTICE c .. ,, IUPIRfCM' COURT Of P\ellC NOTICE CAU,ORNIA, COUNTY ~TITIOUI IUllNHI °'LOI ANGl!Lll HAMI ITATIM•NT CONSOUDATID RUORT a. coemrnoee Of1Cf1aa..U. OflCOITA..U C«la .. dated ...,_, Olf C....._ el Ol!C'7 r 1 .... el eo.u ...... ~ c....,. _. a ..... t • cc rtm .. the doee of bttuln 111 Oft lillrdt 11, ttM. .......... 1o. ai...· ..... ta Tlla n • URTI Cash and due fr0tn banks .......................... -...................... t.oet lnve9tment MCUrtt• (Mlfket v9'ul M ,228). ..................... 5,075 Fed•al funds ao6d and MCUrlt• r>ufc:NMd under 9greements to r...,I In d~lc otfk:ee ....................... 3,350 Loana. Total ............................................ -......... H .M1 Leu: Allowance for poulble loan ioe.ee................. .............. .. .. ................... ...... &28 Loan•. net......................................................................... M.433 Bank premiw, F.F. & E. etc .............................................. 2,878 Reel •tate owned other than 0t:!.:t~'.~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:: = TOT AL ASSETS .................... ~. ••• ZS 3M ~· TOT AL OE POSITS IN DOMESTIC OFflCES ........... U .&48 Totll demand depoltta ....................................... 24.286 Toi~~ ci~~~S=M=-AND .................. 44.362 FOREIGN OFFICES ...................................................... 61,648 Other lt.btlltlea for borrowed money, Including note belanoM of U.S. Treasury ........................................ 008 Other llabtlltlea....... .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ... .... ..... . ............... ... ....... 480 TOT AL LIABILITIES................................... .. ................... 89, 137 IHAMttOl..DEl'9 EQUITY Common a1ock No. Shares 1uthortzed 1.500.000 No . ah11es outstanding 1.034,939 ................. 3,850 TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL. ..................................... 3,850 Ret•lned earning• ............................................................. 2.382 TOT AL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ..................................... S.232 TOT AL LIABILITIES ANO SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ..... 75- The underllgned, Pmge V. Slmpeon, PreelcMnt l CEO and CorrlM P . And.,aon. V1¢9 PrMICMntlCeahlef oC the •bove-named bank. MCt\ deetar•. fOt NmMK elont end not tor the other: I haw P9faonel know.: of the~ c:oot.11..S'" thta report and I ~ thlt IUINIMnt tn Wet report le true Each of 1he under'Mgned. f0< h meetf _,,,. llld not for the other, certifies under penalty of pet)ury that the f0<ego6og la ttue and correct. Executed on April 11, 198-'. al Coat•~ California Paige V Simpson Corrine Anderson Publlal'led Orange Coast Dally Piiot Aprll 17. '98-4 2067~ l't8JC NOna: S.-2.13CM For Use by LIFE. ACCIDENT & HEAL TH ln.uranoe Compan,_ LIFE ANO ACC_,.NT AND HEAL TH IYNOPlll OP THE ANNUAL ITAT'lmNT- YE~ 1NDED DeC.111111411, 1911 of C-clel ......... ........ c......, 1401 °'°" .......... f'loor, Newpof1...-,CA. ... Total admitted asset• Tolel ll1bllltlel Ceplt1I paid-up Gtoas paid-In end contributed surplus UnaasJQned funds (aurplus) Gain (Loss) from operellons Increase (Decrease) In Capital and eurplu• during 1983 Insurance In f orce Nationwide Acckient and health pr.,-n1um1 lnaurenoe In Force: California Buelne11 PAQe Accldenl and health premiums - Dir.ct Calltornla S29,H1.627 $23, 782.559 St.100.000 S7.716,458 (12.837,590) (S 1,218,4871 (St,403.804) "· 162.5'48,000 117,287,995 s,. •3.t, 139,000 BuslMSS Page S18,462,a&.4 W1 hereby certify that the •bove llttml ere In eccordanoe wtth the Annual Statement fC>f tn. year 11nded Oeoember 31. 1983, made to the lnaurenoe Commlsalonef' ol 1he State ol California, pursuant to law John S Rousseau. President Marshall A Strange, Assistant Secretary Publlshed 01ange Coast Daily Piiot Aprll 16. 17 t8 HI. 20. tae.4 2075-8.t P\8.IC NOTICE Ml.JC NOTIC£ •·23303 FIRE AND CASUALTY SYNOPlll Of lltE ANNUAL STATS•NT THE CANADIAN IMWMMn"Y COWANY 3.350 tWMf atM. Coeta lllMa. CA. '821 Year EndM Dec.mbeir S1. 1111 Total admitted eaaeta Total llab1ll11es S1 250,000 $7 487,8•9 S65.« t,720 sse 703.870 Capital paid-up/Guaranty Cep11ellStaMe<y Oepollt Unassigned fundt (surplus) Surplus as regards policyholders S8.137 ,8.t9 Income for the yeer 5'2.901,781 Wateh, man'• blaok RMbox Clllert-County C~ ol Orange County on oar. 1• 1 1 Watc:t). man'• bl.ck M11Ch 30. 1984 ton. helra, legat ..... 0t CS.V ...... In In th• Metter o r BRUNO the •tall of JC>Mnna M Oleenlk RODRIGUEZ. Min<>f. I petlOn-"<> ~. wh<>M lat add,_ wu ahou•d ..,. 0.Cltr9d frM from 432 9 Harbor • 160. Santa Ana.. c:uatO<ly I nd control of hil parent Ot Callfornle thet lett•• teetamentary paren11 In th• Mllllr o f BRUNO Tiie IOllOWl"O '*~ II ooino RODRIGUEZ MtnOI A 1>9flon -110 bullnlU ti 01abursement1 for the year 5'3.eet. 183 wa hereby oertlty lh•t tn. atx>w item• are In ~denoe wtth the Annua l Statement lor the yeer ~~Der 31. 1983 made to the lnsurence CommlNk>nar. purtuant to law CNk> calend.,, 1\2. t Wateh man'• bled! la Marque calendar 143. 1 WatCfl. man'• b4acll CU60 • ~. 1'4 1 Watch. man'• Y'll- low metal St41to. 14&. 1 Watch man'•~ metal Witt~. 148, •-.,. 11nr"'c 1 W9tcfl, ladV'I ._.OM ~ ----'"---..-..-""--~-----dar, 141. 1 Wsteh. ledY• ~ '10TmOU9 ..._ .. .,,.., TlrNll. 1•• 1 Watctl. Wdy't um STA'l'OmlfT • yelOw metlt Tlmll! c!IO"el. 1'8 t The fo1owtn9 per90f\a .,. Going w.-. '*'(• ~ "'91111 Tlmu. bualMM. 1f0. 1 W.tctl. lecly'a ~ metel nmu. 151. 1 WatOh, ledy'• ~ BEAUCHAMP INTIAPflUS!8, !Mt .. Tlmeic, 182. 1 Watctl, lady'a TAAOINO DIVISION, 4000 ~ Ceafo digit•. 153. 1 Watdl M.c.Arthur BouleVard, Sult• TOO. lecfV'I ~ met.i Oene¥t. 164 N9WPorf 8Mctl" CA 82MO Ml.a111neoua ooett.llM ,...iry Jamee 8 .,..uchamp, 4000 165 tt, YelOW metel c:nainec:; MecAtthuf eoue.v.rd. ~ 700. ~ ..._ 181. 1 ~or. Newport e.cn. CA. nte0 , Cenolil L tOOA Mettle, 15 T t c.lou--Aldwd L IMuc:Nmp, 4000 • tetor, Utidelwood. 161, 1 r,,,. MacArthUr loulewaro~ too. wrtw, 19M a.lectttc, 111. 1 r.,,.. ~,~· c:~!1ere, 4000 ~. llM ~rte. 190. 2 Ohelrl. • Offt01 a.Ml wftt1 ll'fM. 1t1 i MacArthur Boule¥ard. Sun• TOO. ...-. t•" Newport llMot\. CA. 02teO CNn. OfftC9 ...... '""' _,,.,._ -TMI bullntat It c:onduGted by-• t CMlf-, Of'ftOI ........... """' ..... ~.,. ' 113. I CMirt, OflCe ~ wt1tl Alchwd L.. ~ .,.,,., , .. 2 c:Mn. Oflloe .....,.. Thte lmell*ll .... tied-"" tN • """ erma. 115. 2 CtMn. Offtoa Coun*'-0'9l1C of 0r-COunty on ....., t11ttt1 arma, 1• a~ of• ., -....- ftoa MIMI Wltfl arma, 117 t Chalfa, March JO. 1184 OfftC9 .....,.. ~ wma. , •. a::&•:-:.•••..,. ,,,_ ~ oMce""' """ lnN, 1• I ~. Oflloe tJilWi"'-· 110 2 .., v. a .... Aw awn. ..,... """ .,,.., 111 a .,..._CA...,,. CMlra. 1 Oflloe. 1 ,,......... -"". P\ltllllNd ~ COM! Deily fml:.-t °""91 Qoa9t CMlly Piiot PW APfl 10. 11. 2.t, Mey 1, 1114 ~f.tM4 IOl2-t4 1Hl-M or of adrnlnlstratloll lleY'I .,..,, II· CAN__.,. A·t..U IUed to Shlfley A. S"91k:lan t>y, CITATION Wayne County Probat1 Court • Fr..Orom From P11entat Cu1t0dy oourt Of oomoet«'lt tuflldle11on of and ContrOI ,,. s···· ofa Mlchla. (ABANOONMl!NT) That the peteon II ~ ("9 AOOPTIONI oeb11<1 lo or =pr~ To EVA AOOAIOU!Z end to all «1Y Of thil Mid t· The peAOnl ct•imlnG 10 .,. the fetner Of Croctler 8antl 1•'41 "'at and mothet of aald minor 1>9rt0n(•I Harbor) P 0 . Box IOla City of: al>OYa named. Sant• Ana County of: Ofange ly 0td9r of 11\it Court you .,. Thal tM ut•del'llgo9d ~ to hereby cited Md (may) IC>PM' reotlv9 tM Mid peraonal property blfort the Judoe P1'91id!ng In 0.. or coMct 1ri. delm(1) and to r9m0¥9 pertment u Of Int llC>OW 911tttled tM dac1ed Of NCefwd frOtn Int coun. tocated 11 RM 41111 t Norttl Stet• of OelltorN IO tri. ..... Hiii St . LA CA 90012 on 1-ia. .,_. ._,.,. ~tatY Of Of ad-1984, al II 30 AM of In.I diry. then mlnlltratlon ~ bl9fl -*' . IM\d t,,.,. to lhOW ~ K MY you All P9f9Qnl 11.-Mg cllllmt aoelflet ha .... Why lllld pet110f1 llhOUlcl not be ttte Oeoedetlt or an In..,_. In Mid declared f,.. from the oontrot of •tat• Md wltlNng to ob~ to tuCfl perent1 acoorellng 10 lhe p.cltton on rwmov9I muat gMI written nolk» of t119 ,..,_ wdl objeietton to tN peraon or S*· Thi petition llecl fWtiln It tot th9 aone Indebted to, or ~· purpota Of ir...,. tN Mlotac1 cNIO aot'Wll P'OC*tY of, IM ' lor ~t tor aoopuon 8uct1 notice mutt be OIWfl to the 0.19<1 4-M4 ~ llok:llng ,,_ ao PAY& llft9t JOHN J COACOAAN. eounr, Cl«ll ..,._. publteellon of tNt notio. tty AM ANOlRSON, Dapu1y DATID MetClfl 21. ,... COOK ANO ......,... ~A."**" _._........._ .... _ .. 119tltionef of 1M ...., ..... CA. -""-Of .loMMe Ill. oe-6 (HI) ..... , ""*'*' Orantt OoMt Delly Plot ~ Oftngia Coast ~ P1IOt Aprll ,0, 11. 24. ,... ... ..... 17 24 M-1 I IM4 1~•· ........ -· . . '°~ lh<>Uld be CllClared frN from tM 111 E 0 I C " L E 0 U I P M E N T cullOdy tno control or hil p.,ent ()I SPECIAL TIES 24372 Hlllv-Qt parent• L99'1n• Niguel Calif 92677 CAM NUMel .. A·1"'°' Sandia Ryan, 14J72 Hiltview Dr CITATtOH l aguna Nlg\191, Calif 92077 DENNIS ALBERT RILEY. UNITED STATES MANAGER Published Oranoe Coast OaJty Piiot AP'il 16. 11. 18. 19. 20, tae.4 207"-14 Fr..Oom From Par.nttl Cullody ft111bual,_.1e l!Onduc:ted t>y an Ind Control lndlvtdual (ABANDONMENT) Sandra Ryen NI.JC M>na: (A. A00Pl10H) ft111 11J1t...-t WU l!l90 wtll\ lh9 -..za11 TO UNKNOWN ,AT HER and 10 County C.-01 Oranot Counr, on UM b~ FIRE ANO CASUALITY lneurenc;e CornpeN11 : ':,:' :a1::0 r::na: •= Mar 22 1964 nt1• IYMOH&I °' THI AMNUAL ITATbmJfT al>Ove named Publiatled OtMgia Cou1 Deity m-ITAI' IHl\MAHC'I ~ANY 8y orci. of''"' Couf'l you are PllOI Ap<tl 10 17 ~· May I 1984 1nU .... ~A ... hclt.t>y Cited aftd (rneyl 11PPMt !t35 e. '""'9, CA. llt1S bltOtl the Judoe Pr9tidino In 0.-...... ()Moe oenmtnt u of the ~ entitled 1------------,_........... D ... a .. - OOUl'\,located at Rm •ti 111Nottti "8.IC NQTIC( Yw ._aaantolf .. ·- HIM St L A CA 90012 on 6-2~ 1---...;...;..;..;;....;_...-----Total edmlftad auet• t9'4 "8 '°AM of tMI dty. lhen ~TmOU• MlaMU Tota l MabllltlM and tw1 to el'IOW ~ If env you NA• ST,ATD!mWf ~taf peld.-up/Guarenty tieve. wtly Mid pet'90n llhoulcl not be The lotloWlno pertOfl II OOlng CepftallSUatUtOty Oepotlt Cleclatld frM lrom Iha oonlrol of 1>W1Me8 U aroet peld4n .,a per9ntl acc«dlng IO the petition on CALlf'OANl1' MOOALING AS oonlrlbuted aurplua flte ,_..,, SOCIA TH 1o&262 Culv9t Dr Uneulgn8d rvnct. (eure>tue) 1700.000 (-1 16.141 ~:=,:':,~IOI~ A~:., ":~!.:7~ Tanoe'O Surptut M reQWda tor plac.tMnl tor adOC>tlon lryjne. CA 9271' P~ S\, 19',1&4 Oal.O 4 9 ... Ttii. buelMM .. COMUC1.0 0.. Ill\ Income ror tn. yeer l305.2'43 JOHN J CO .. COAAN County C*1t iNIVlclual OllburMtMnta tof the ,_. m ,IOI A M ANOCRSON. Oec>uty Latty A Motmenn W• ~ cwt~ INl lhe abOW *"* ... In aooord.noe ..... ... COCMC ..... AND ~ ... -Thie 11a•9lftll'lt ... llled with ti. the Annual Stat..,,..,I tor the .,.. .-tOed ~ 3 \, 1•. --.. COunry Cterk Of Orall09 County Of\ ~ to the I~ Commi.ionw, pur-9UMI IO llJw. ~~A.-... ""' 30 ..... nGS1'I HaM Cofteng ~t JloubttlMO °'.,. Coa.•t o.iiy P1101 l'ubllaMO 011noe eo... Ody Aober1 M Erlc:bon S.Cr9ta1y Mf'll 11, 2• MA) • IH• PMol 4ptfl 11\ H , ... .., t. ..... PubU•hed Of•noe eo.t ()<Wly PQo' Aorft 11. 17, 18. 11. 20 ..... ~ 114 IHl-6' IO~ .. ce • Orange Cout DAtLV PILOT/Tueed , April 17, 1984 ' Ml.JC ll)f1CE QlPA"TMIHT 0, THI fMMOR't'twrlNW. MV'EN4JE ~~TICa Of' MAUD • lllD IALS •= "'-~ In lntemel Code~ m1, tM pr°'*1)' deeCriOed b9low -~ ...., tor nonpeymeht of im.m.i rrtenu9 ta.di duie from SMo end s~ a.ott. 2201 fttt¥.W Aoed. Newport leld\, CA t2MO. TM P'°'*'Y .. be IOld a1 pubic .... under ......, tMcl .. p<cMded by Internal ~ Code ~ l3S5 and ,....,., reguletlone.. ~ Bide wlll be opeMd; May '· 1"'4 Time bl6t .... be opened: 11:00 em Pt-. 01 -..a:~4000 Aria Rd .. ~ Nlgu91, C"·· 82t71 f ltle offered: Only tM tight, tltt. and lntet .. t ot Stno en8 SyMa e.t>olf In Ind to the P'°'*"Y wlll be on.red fOf Mle. If ~. tM Intern.I Revenue S9'Yic. wlll lumlllhlnlonneuon llbout PQMlble eonoumbf~. whldl l"NIY be UMNI In determining tM .,,..._ of the lntw•t being IOld. Neture of Tiiie: TM right. tftle, end lnter .. 1 of tile taxpeyet In and to the properly II offered for Nie 1Ybjec1 to eny P<lor velld outstand- ing rnortg~. encumtxancea, or other lien• Iii faYOf Of third part- egalnlt the tu.payer tllal are au- perl<>f to lhe lien of the United Stites. All pr.,,,....ny II olferec:t tor 1"9 "'#Mre l;r.-~CI "U 11" and wllhout reoourM agaln6t the United States. No guarenty or warranty, eapres1 or Implied. la made u to tile \lalielity of the title. quality, quan- llty, ~Ill. alze.'or conclltlon of any or trie property,°' 111 fltnas tor any ute or purpOM No Claim will be con9'Clered for allowance or ad1u11- ment or for rNClaaion of the sale bueel on failure of the property to confOf'm wtth any expreueel or Im· plied repr_..tatlon. Aedempuon Alghll The rights ol redemption, at specllle<l In Internal Ae\lenue Code MCtlon 633 7. are quoted u follOW9 lee. ISS7. "edempUon of Pr~ eny. (a) BelOl'I Sale -Any person wno.. property hu bMrl levied upon lhall ha,,. the right to pay the amount Clue, togelher with the e•· per1aes of the proceeding, II any. to the Secretary at any time prior to the sale tllereol, and upon IUCh pay- ment the Secretary thall rettore auch prop«ty to him. and all further proc:Mdlnga In connection wtth the le")' on such prO(>e(ty lhalt cease from the time of IYCf't payment (bl Aec:temptlon of Real Estate Atter Sale ( t) Period -The owner• of any real prop«ty sotd at provided In section 6335. their heirs. executors. or administrator•. or any person having any inter .. t therein. or a lien thereon. or eny perton In their behalf Shall be permitted to redeem Ille PfQPel'tY IOICI, or ll'IY partleulal: tract ol IUOh property at any time wHh1n 180 days attar the .... tl'lef• of (2) Price • Such property or tract of property shall be permitted lo be red.med ttpon payment to the purchaMf, or in c ... he cannot be found In the oounty In which the prQ91rty to be redMmed 11 situ- ated, tl'lerl to the Secretary, -for the use ol the pureh-, hit heirs, or aaslgns. the arnount paid by SYCh purchuer and Interest thereon at the rate of 20 percent per annum Sec 6339(c) ENect of Jumor En· cumbrances Effect of Junior Enc:umbranCfi A cenllleate 01 aale of personal prop· arty given or a deed to rH I property executed purauant to section 6338 ltlall e11scttarge IUCh prO(>e(ty from 111 11en1. encvmbfanC411. and utles over wtuch the lien of the United Statft with reepect to wtlleh the levy was maoe had priority Deecrlpuon of property Lot t of Tract 2513. as per map recorded In book 110 paoes 11 and 12 of mis- cellaneous maps. 1n the oNtee ol the county recorder of said Orange County c:Mnmonty known as 2201 Prtvale Road Newpon Beach CA 92660 A brick. wood and stUC~() single lamtly-Clwelflng with attached garage Property may be 1n1pected at above address from utenor only Submission of bids All b10s must be submllted on Form 2222. Sealed Biel for Purchase ol Selzeo Prop. arty Contact the ottiOe 1nd1cated below for Form1 2222 and lntor- matlon about the property Submit bt<la 10 the perlOf'l named below before the time bid• wtH be opened Payment Tllfml. BICll mu1t be ac- companied by tne lull amount of the bid 11 It totals S200 or lesa. If the total bid 11 more than S200. submit 20 percent of the amount of the bid or $200. whichever Is greater On 1ec99tance of the h'91'1Mt bid. the balance due 11 any wtll be required 1n lull Form of payment All paymenta must be by c:ath c;enlfled check. cashlef s or treaturer·s check or by a United Stat .. postal, bank, ex- press. or telegraph money order Mak• check or money oroer pay- able 10 the Internal Revenue Ser- vice FRANK GUIDO. Revenue Officer 2•000 Avila Rel Leguna Niguel CA 17 1')631-4020 Date Aprll 9 1984 Publlsl'leel Orange Coast Dally Ptlot Aprtl 17. 198• P\B.IC NOTICE K-10737 Mollee of Sale of Real Pr1>p9rty at '""''' aai. No A 11 62 37 2087·8• In the Superior Coort ol the State or C.altlorma lor lhe County of Or- ange In the Mallef or the E11ate of Ren•e V Woodsmall Deceased 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D CLASSIFIED INDEX REAL £STATt ~••Wt•t A.nalwom Holla 8tlt.v. 111•114 8ol-....... ...w. C.pu1u no1 8"I i'I (.'<)(()oWdorr Ma/ l·~..,M-°""" Pu.nl El TvN rounw&n .......... llunun''"" a... i'I ltuno Harbour lrvuw a....un .. 0.-..h i....,u,,. Hilt. 1...,.una N11U"I u~· ru.nl M.-•1 v,..,, I'·~·""' 0.-..h S.n l,.._,..,. S..n Ju..n l •~1tlt•nu :,.""" luw s..1 e. .. h !iuuti'o l...ol(UNI su-1 &o.<11 T ... 1tn Wf"'t\Mil\ll~f Mut..1.-H........, >,,,~ .... Ap..r~n\I> e.. ... n """"°"' e.....-l'r<>ph l _,...,., 'J' i..u.. 4 ·onwnl Pr,,p.-rt"' l'ondoman1um. I lvplfo•n Unn• ll....-1llt...MvYO\I ln•otnf' t''ru.,..•rh l11iduJ11twl t'rttph t...•lo lur S.k Mubolr """"° Paril.t .1itoun~1n Dr.rt °'••llf\ Cu Ou• ut l0•Nnh '~' ut SY1,. tt., ... ~ r.~ !Wor\~y 1""" s"""""' Ill~ ft & Wanlfod RENTALS vu.... fi.rm•h«I Hl>Wft Unfumlthed lt·~f'"muhfot.l •.r u "'""'..,,.., undu f urn ·...,.,.,unt ~nOOwn rum own"°'*"' Uni Oupkoltft J'urn Ouplut'O Uni pAt'lnwn,. f'uml&hed """""'"'"Uni pla rvm OI Un i Koon• Room a. llo;ord HOl#la MOl#ll wo1Homn !ivmmPrlWnYll v..,. ....... ~\Alo ·iwn\alt "' s~ •Rfti<a» Wan....S G~ '°' !Vnt Off",. Rt-ni.lt a....,_ !Vni.lo ConvN !Wni.lo lndual IVnUlla s • ., .. M,. R.-ni.t.. ANfOJNCEMENTS BUSlr€SS l FINANCIAL s,...,,.._.,,,.s.i.. • 8-no. OpponUl\llA ... o...,,_ w.nle<I • anv,...,nwn, ()ppvr'twulH't lnvn\mrnl Wa.n\td • Mofll ' \tJ L.u.n •Mon• , Wanlf'd Mu11., •JC•.._ 1 (J , EMPLOYMENT U 0 l1 \.\ .. , ... ,, •JI~. ';o\;t"""'' MERCHAPl>ISE "''' 4'*'' "s·~lio1n••"I /\U1>11·•U' 81Jet M .. h 1 i•b l •n"'r .. 4' ~u1(W'nf"• 1 ("••hVUh" t r'f*f Ill 'll'U f ur111lur1 t. ... t•j(f" lo\Jil,... t111'1.h• h11hJ (it••1' J1•1iiir•'''' M•h•B•f'lo Mu•1ll .. ~\ Mia '-'•nl.-d M\IMl •I ln.trumrnt..t Ulf • f '""''""-'' &. t~·U1ptfW"nl f'ue,n.• ~ '>f'tr•JU ~~'ft1n• t .. t.A.l(t .. f\. ~div ~u r"• BOATS 1: IOOI t001 1011 IOU 1024 lOM ICW 1034 1040 1042 1044 1041 tO)() lPU ·~~ lot7 10&• 1016 t01• lOIO 1084 IOMI IOM IOllO 109e 1100 i 12) "'° 111~ 110! 12n 12~ Ill· i IOI lJl. IJ~ 1.11' 14lN u n 14~ 1)()11 l~l' 1»1• 1)7'• UIO 1)90 lllOO Ul2) 211111 l20C. <l(Xn 3004 JQl7 )014 )()lb ,1(/16 'h-11 t1·1 *4• nl 1t' 10 I,,.,,.. rtel 711?' P11..,..,t "OlJ i.., .. 11 ,•014 '°'J.-~""' ..., .. , ttl., M.11n. •••"'''' ':'01,_ !.\,.Oil ~ f \ M 4 *tl'O ..._i..,.. "'° I••'' ·o~~ :O..\•l'f"•f(• lOi4 "-.uf'P"'"' It~""* ,,.f" ~uif't ~111> .. rd• 111J~ i~ .. '.;,'~AHSPORTATION ::·i~ t .,, ~-, r\t I IM~· .. •\.1 ..... " .,. "···t• ,, \l I I tt llfi '" K\ t tu••'"' If•\• I r, ""' I 1111h AUTOMOTIVE ''' I· •"'ill.,; \.,, """' .,., •'•'"- \'••f'llo \A. 1r t•I -..,,. k .. • kul ' -.\I•• IJit I I •• \ ....... \.t i:• ... , , .. , .. THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIF IED OFFICE HOURS Telephone Service: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Business Countt r : Monday-Friday 8:00 .M.-5:30 P.M. ... !11 ... Thie oui.t9nd l)fice not only lnclu<lel t 3 Bdrm 2 Ba home with frple:, bYt allO pool, reot'Mtlon fa- clllti.t and ~te ... tetlo< and garct.n main. tenance. CIOM to ldlootl and lhope>l"G; 151·3191 C:SELKT aip'PAOPEATIES . DEA OLl~E tll,llO Pl BLJ( :ATI O~ \l o nda~ Tu1•.,d H\ \\ Ntn .. ~da~ Thurschn Frida~ ~aturdi:.~ ~HI. \Ion. Tu1· ... " .. d. Thur~. Frida ~ Fri .. OE;\OUNE Fant.!t~~i"!., the I I : JO H . rn. best 1hopplng In the t "'() 1• nl Southland. Nine theatres • .» •· · and all med & prof. ser- l: :W p .111 . vice1. Better '" tlll9 one t ''() FASTI 759-tSOt t :» p.rn . a::rn p.n1. :l:OO p .rn. :s:oo p.m. CANCE LLATIO & CORRECTIO S: lllOUYH YHUILLH A Deane townhome In one ol Newport's most pres- tigious gate-guarded communltlet. A beautiful corner unit with magnifi- cent views. Paddle tennis cour1, lovely grounds. complete MCutlty sys- tem. All In excellent con- dition $750.000 Lucy Rose 6·4"-6200 ~M1cn1b-lrvin11 I I I' I \ I I I \1 • ' \ ', ' lllLllll'S Duple• situated on A·3 lot m Santa Ana Add more umts for Income A1kfng $89,900 Traditional Realty 6:\1 -7:l70 00110·1.C PIH ,, .. COMPARE * 3 Bdrm 2 ba. cholee lo· callon Easy terms OUR CLASSIFIED RATES Daily 108 777 25c Pl'lot I C11culat1on ptr thousand $95.000 HWPlllT IUCll LIT 90 Jt 178 with gOOd 3 Bdrm oldernome S215.000 ll•J lo0er41• llttr. Hl-1121 .. Fllll 1111,100 Nor th Coate Me•• Ba rg a i n Huoe 3 bedroom. 1~. bath. added large separate tamlly room. fireplace. You fix-it and '8\19. Cell to ... 548-2313 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS THE REAL ESTATERS IEST 3880 Mlcnel1on Drive Irvine 3 br, 3 ba twnhM In sea- gate. amenities galOfe. 40' boat d()CI(. S t896 mo (213)320-3460 Large t Br. Apl. crp11. drps. pool, landscaped pool area. $385/m(). No pell. 646-3618 aft 3:30 W.llALIEHPlD CtrHI ••I •ar IOU Walk to shops, beach. Bal pier. ferry/rests. 3Br/2ba lllT SIU~ AOIE ea. 218 Bal Bl 673-2943 Cameo Shores. 4br. pool.----==--------spa $498.000 760-lO 15 WANT Harbor View home Nr perfect 3 Br 3 Ba futuristic design frplc I/yd encl oar S875 Lrg 2 Br t Ba. Cpts. lg drapes, 2246 Canyon. No pets. $525. 832-1766 • area to lease. buy or op- C11t1 ••11 l 4 tlon. 548-4609 ••~ii• a.... 11 oo 2 Mstr bdrm. 2ba. Monte--•--------- cello, upgraded, huge Wiil llUI walk In closet etc Motl· t972 Beautiful Vllla West vated ownr. wlll acciept Home 20x60' corner lot. reas ottr Super loc Hugo Highly upgraded 2Br 2ba, W/834-3897 H/549·2163 lge llv/dln/kltcll area. Light Interior. Best buy In Orange Co $25.000. t tee 539-6190 BEST l"ilt 2244 RanOing In price from $900-$1200 ~ ~isor 1 ·Realty 1 786-1172 1 Affordable llvlng 4 Bdr. H'· Young edits weleome Ba. corner lot, AV access. Agt 540-5937 / Room for pool & spal For ~IMlllM.<i~M... top flight ectlon contact htltxt1/01it1 13 3880 Michelson Dflve V er n • S t r 0 n g a t Newport oceanfront prime Irvine 962-552 t loc Xlnt fin Private --------- By owner, charming 4 Br, Party 675-7873. TUATLEAOCK TWNHME p , ba lrg lot 60 x 110 --21 den, w/lac. over- C 1 · · I p lJSO looking grnbelt Avail r:;t~~!t opti'.:sb~ne;' ICO•I Hf May 1 1 yr lse pref S 1250 Sl t5.000 673-779t1 1111rn • dep Drive by 9 Aaln- Lro 2 Br. 2 Ba. •Jpstalrs condo. 2 car enct\d gar, very nice. No pets $650 644-2270.644-878~ Lr9 3 Br 2 Ba, cpl. drapes, gar. llld1 OK. no pets. 290t Mendoza. 557-8177 MESA PINES 2650 Harle LIKE NEW t Br.$510/up PAVT patio poolside spa. TOP area. quiet. no pet1 141·2~1 New« 1 & 2 Br with garage. No pet1. From $460 & S5 t0 645-5577 Pvt 1 Br, frplC, pool. patio. gar No pets. 399 W. Bay. $525 650-6357 Stunning large 2 Br 2 Ba garden apt. pool & rec area $545 7 tO w 18th St COSTA MESA 8 IX gross. bow Falls Bkr Roseann assum11ble llnanc1ng Deluca 85 t-9987 WE IFFH A OMIOf Drive by 28 12 Serang 1 t 6% Need last sale UT C t Br condo. micro. Want a aei.ctlon of great MESA VERDE Adorable 3BA 2ba, AV Agt 650·6330 W/D hookup. near new tlVfng? We can otter any· s t or age. S 169 .000 Motels. Or. Cty and Al\ler-$650/~o _!51-1525 dys. thing from a small apt to Ownr/Bkr 1·679-2680 side 1 6 .7 5 minion lnrt ltac~ 22'9 a 4 Br hou1e. II looklng In 4 6 140 11 A t CM, NB or HB thlntl of us POOL 75S-t045 ~E;A~PLEi 2~ a 1 story Condo. ttrst lor that choice ot •BA 2ba. Meta del Mar -near Newport Beech 17th Ideal IMng Must see • very nice l1••1tri1l Prtt 1375 St shoppmg 646-4627 TSL MGMT 642-t603 Call 641-8833 600 f ff --N B REAL TY 675· t642 SUCCESS REAL TY 1 s/ w/sml O Ice. 50c BluNs Condo. 3 Br 211 be, pll 3 phaae. AandOlph 1850 sq It New pamt & D111 Peiat 272' Not>ce 1s hereby given thll tne unoe-s1gneo w•ll sell at Prtvate .. i.. ro the h•gnett and bell bidder SUI>· 1ect to conr1rmat1on of sa1<1 Superior Court on or alter rhe 23rd oay of April 198•. ar 1rie office or M111n M Dostal. Suite 1000 505 City Parkway West. City ol Orange County of Orange. State of Call· forn111 all right lllle and lnterett of n 10 deceased 111 the 11me of oeath end all the right lltle and •nterett thll the estate or said oeceued has acqu11ed by ope<etlOn of law 0< otherwtSe other than or 1n 1od111on to lhar ot sate! deceased at the time of death In and to ell the certain real property altuated In the City of Santa Ana County of Orange. State ol California. parhcularly ClffC/lbeO at foltowt. to-wit \nto•j •• t -. .. .., AUTOS IMPORTED . ' -.. .... ~ .. , Santa Ana Register Newport Ensign 49,000 C1r,ula1ton 63¢ per thousand REPOSSESSION St, CM 546-1653 crpt Close to pool l ro 2 Br ~ den. 2 Ba. I•-------• 3 Bdrm fixer $98.000 Low O•t ti Stitt S t 350/mo 921· 14"7 Ocean vu, encl. gar down Agent ~46·7739 Prettrty lSSO Charming Blulls "E" plan. wtsuto opener. newly re- LOI 15 Of Block C' Of TraC1 No 549 " per map recorded tn BOOll 19 P9111 3• of Mltt*laneout Mac>t 1n the ottice of the County AecOl"Oet ol Orange County Calllomla more commonly knowl'I aa a t4 H1lladay. Santa Ana, C1Ul0tnla Term• of ••le catti In lawful money of tlM United Stat .. on con· nrmallon of sale. or p1r1 caen end t>al•noe evtOenceCI by note MCUreel t>y Mor1g899 or Trust Deed on the pt()f>9fty 90 SOid Ten '* W"tl or amount bid to t>e Oapotlted w11h bid B•d• Of' offeB to be in Wf lllng and .,,;II b4I recetveel at the alor ... :ld Of· flee 11 any time atter the llrat publl· cation nereol and belOl'tt <l•t• ot .... Dated thl1 8th Clay of Maren ti .. PlllY A l(roeg« ~norney for P111nion-Patil A 1(1oeoer Ml~f'if _,. DOST Al E ... c"ttt• of the htlll or Mid Oeced41nr Put>l~ Or~ Cout Oaity Pilot AO!" 10. 11 t) tHtl !SIM t• 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 \II 1 H.111u•1 A1. ... l1 ""'' .... tlMY. ' ,,, .. ,, .... t .. 011 It. 1,,.,,., ..... ,. ... , fl·~··· h11flj J •• , ..... , J•h"'' L.mb M"tttuh1 l..et•tt Loh .. • Mot-I• M••r•t1 M ... n., ..... tt.t11 Mu .• ~ti..U.1 Ml. '"-"'' •'•ttl""f• ··~~~ }•1,,...tw RA-nauh Rulla Aov-.,.. .... " .. ' S...11 !\uhliru f1\n~ Ttt"'m,,...., , . .,.._,, .... \ lh.H M•• AUlOS. OOM(STIC ""'' """' .. "' ... hil'-rnht ... , ........ lhtr f ""1 Im ''u.! ·~""'·" M f"'l'\U'\ II ltmubolo [•1 ....... 11'1 •'"'fl• ~IH I v10; WllN •IU wtt• .... •llV v1:1 •Ill WIJ) "', ... -..iiv ~I Ii 'llJ1 Ill,, WI.I' The Pennysaver 52,000 C11culation 80 ,000 C11culahon soc per thousand 49c ptr thousand Rates Based On 3 Lines -7 Times ·Based On Competing Clrculatlon In Piiot Market ~UI l....!:==:::::========•iliiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ YIO I :::~ t::~~~, s~ \\~ ~ -Q, r.~~· •Ott ..... ~10 -----14 .. 4 ~, Cl.A' I ,otlAJ• ----- Wl)I llU J VI)) 91)7 tl)t till lllU fllll •111 0 ,., ...... ~ •••• ' c• "'• fov' wro-e.1..0 ....,.~h b4 io.,. '0 fo,,.., fo '"9101-e w·:>•Ot C R U 0 r E I I I 11 I A R H S H I r I I c H A w j( I 1--1~1,-1 ~t . Sn<llJo"Q .. tr Ir ' 1,1\l'tA!Wt y "" l<IY .. llel~tl~li ""1!-H -rt IT>tt Wl'li ,ol<e<l llUtlMl<IO I IO\oll --------- 0 • Q)' -=-(/) :> (/) -:.~ en (/) a. 1J ro Q) :> a. < (/) lb -· " < -- -· J • CD >< • ,, CD ~ • U> -· < CD • Daily Pilat ~. SACAIFICEI Bargain 2 Br ~ -vety private. cul de sac. 3 carpeted & decOfated. A/C pool1lde condos' Beaut t"' acre. Spraque BA. tam rm, 2''t bath•. 493-t030 s69 900 3br s79 goo River Valley, Oregon s t650 mo i--------- Low' down OK Patrick $98,000/0bO. 960-7047 UNIQUE HOMES Nice 1Br 1b•. 1r19, dallwr, 675 6000 nu crpt Adults pref No Tenore 7&0-8702 I.I. bcliutt 00 · pets. ssoo 498-0271 ,00-L -Axvt.6 ONlts c Jl c1AfaerHEse With S200K equity Unbeatable yearly 3Br 2Ba 3BA 2ba. S15K dn OWC WANT l0-t8 unlti In IOcal home lelsure patio klOI balance 30 yre t2'•W. ., ... 540•4484 Agent pell $1000 nr H'O Prln only Ask for Hutch •539-6190• CALL 641-8833 I .I. w .. t.. 11 s Flat •teal 28r 28A apple crpts ll'tn.i-out nice loo IHt. ltac~ 1040 •WAIT"''* S600 kld1 llne call ---------1We buy h<NMI. condoe. •539-8190• I lie. W• h hHlt unit• Negettve eaal'I now. Or this Vfll'Y atyt1111 213 Br 3 BR 2ba, fl1aptace. loreck>Mlret OK Your 28a den pool IKut I/yd vaulted c:elllngs. In-price. o u r term• kld/petoc:.al'lcloMll95 1ul1led. new cpt1 & 730·9276 BEST Alty em t• drapes For appt call •539-8t90• owner 96~36 WANT OUT? HARBOR VIEW-4 Br 2~ Condo w/oeean btMH. 3 tn.,..t co buya property ba. tam rm, ltg ~d Bdr. ,., e.. cutlbm mlr· OlltrMMd or neo•tlv• w/deelllng 1 t8001mo ror1 pool 6 reor .. tton OK Your pilce. oui 840..il 144 For top n1g111 .ction, con term• 558.0174x104 tact V erna Sirong 9&2·5521 or 842·2097 bat I 1------------ g•f!IG lt!ill 241·1111 Thia wint•. buV vour own •111 attutP"*lt lflltMO Of r•ntll'IQ You can •tlO•d 1t In clan1hed 842·5078 lr••l•r -'tft;;;;;;:;; .. ;;•;;;.1 WltMu/ ..... •U.. C•!Jt•!rJ Drywall '......... ..... .... .... I !:!''l'!!""l!l.----1!1 • LET A wr oo m r:eNCes a oecKs et>Rvwxcc TDIAd e CIMn uc-•1,..1~ HAUl-Move-Awov& ROOSEXMICI •HAHGM11fiJllOVXL• $2.17 per day M.,~ Conett: rwnodellng, Exiiert~ MfdWOtklng All Textur• & AcoulOC Verd M91M.•Heullng Furniture. Tra.ih. Treee HoUM & Pet s.ttlng BY AICHAAD eaNOA 11+ yrt ~ tw l'fee ... ·-.., edd na, roofing, tml Jobe. & tl~t Wtt. & 3 klde to e, .. ..i KeYin 873-1503 MIKE 150-3~ -"3--5.41$ NOAM NO HOUie too BIO No P.c ~ 2IQIM4, '4 yra of MtK.E ti 1· 1IOO ?"41'11 ...... -,.. TNt'• ALL you pey f()( ~ Uc7. #38107• Call teed. UAAY 7$4·te20 CommetdlA/Aeeldentlal t"~ Sludent W"'°' truck too Smell. We Watch happy locet CUlllOfNile. ' .. ... • 3 "~·: daye ..-.-I H-5322 STEVE REMODELING. REPAIRS. Landacepe Malnt.nance ~~te. prompt ... Ttlank them .... ug._w 1 Thant! ~ t15-03a ·=:~&: !!9!1 .. f • ,,. ;;" DAly ~t Cablnet1,Top0uallty.18 PlllllllUITlll ~Serlloe. ,.., lie, youCOYft75t-193tCdM .... ~ 12YASEXP:l'm .,,...., wori°"'V 240-3173 ~ ............. ... ;; xr ... e CP•tr. r~:.:::35~·~· ~~WOl'k,lr~~~1 Mcw..:r::ec:: l<AUEOEAHAUUNG m&-m. d rd;. My~.,.amlllll &per1 WllccMf""IO In-Orllfl7.o'tllll1-m1 PILOT Reeurtaoing • Ind. • Rea. · ,. 14s..a124 Furniture. trMtl, cleen·ue>e Sod, Y.,d Clean-Upe. AON ...... 11 ~ "'--~ 11941111·41H a!)!t! et REDUCE EJ9Ctr1c BILLS Matt641-.5089 Haullng.P.ie lt044el HOUKPAMIHG• M1~1.M1-tll0. ""'·"~ ~ c.;p;; lPl'IOI Apt/Condo/Church/Bu•. tll...... LT HAULING.MOVING ~ At reduced l!PflnG ,..._ ~:-, M -SERVIC£ ttlat Car~et1 r~ alr~~d lree Coneutt. ~11 Lawn·lr....tvvbin.taft Garage and ard dellnup. Free Mt. Dew ll?Wto1 flw "--Hlgill ~ •hdsth ~=Wlu <*•for re1tretctled.p781-ll11 RESIO/COMM'L./INO Tr•lrlm,!,.~t IHI al Jon 9<46-81l2 Bloctc~~-88ltone CUSTOM PAINTING tunlftG 1™. ·= wotk. l'tdcup '~.: ND£CTORY your toddlet In my CdM 26 yra. Do my own work. Lawn malnt .,., ot1n1ng . ••• ucco C I I A Id I 9")ov ln-l'M>me CIOnCl9l1. ~ .-Ull\ home. 876-5229 aft 8.30 tat ttt uc 278041. Al MS-8128 Freuatlmate ~ Reh. F,.. •t. 5't..9'92 ,~:"'.::.0s:,;,, Z:e-~11 770-0274 ~ Me-5579/E TyplnalWOrci Pta 11&11 .... ~. orivewaya, patloa. path•. raraitut Tree Trim. cs ChronlC P&ln Xtie!Aated ln Brlett. Block, Concrete. HOU8"' P•.t"'"'IUI'> ·== Aibu*--ldlOOI& ... •• plUa the IRVINE MIAAOR and the HUNTINGTON BEAC..COMBER ewfY Wedneaday at no extra charge! CALL TOOAYll &llFllLlll Your Deity Piiot Service Directory Repreeentatlve M2.U2111t.Ht etc. No job too amall. Y11d Main. & H • 1 ...ion w/hypnottlerapy PRICED LOW. ~tom 11:; ""'""' CHI...,. aone11 pr.,.._ •f."41 CUttom ~t• Bkkpg Reu. Mlchy 538-0553 ltlla1Ula1 Leo 947-2457, 667-4 Dorby Sime "H 648-8-401 Wen, lie, Bob 131-1161 At r9duced aprtng '*'• ""' Confldentlal/efflc:lent eerv. -Fr• .. ,. O.V. d'l'&..3901 AMtucooa. Int/ext. 30 Yf9 •ii• From $25 mo. &45-7$00 Drlvewaye. Sldewalk1. &L..a ......,.., ltd~ IHH tla.!!I MASONRY *TILE INT/EXT 20 y..,_ Exper. exp. Neat. Paul &45-2t77iii3iillill9 Pallos. IP• pad1. LIC'd. Cu1tom Made Furniture. ii>TIOME REPAlR Rbelllli's otEXNIRG All Typa. Reu. & Ue. AYefage Room 129 • ED'S PLASTERING. :-~~ .. PROF. BKl<PO./ACCNTG. Ron 556-0034 20"4 dllc. 21 yr1 exper ci-.... ·-"C•,,_try SERVICE.· 1 ... ~.,..,,h.., 631-23'5 Mat-•· ....... 2 ,. ...... 2 --L--.....,.._ Computer. Mod. I .... Free Guar work. Free P·U & ,._..'"""""' -,.,..... """'~• ., • -----...,_ Neat Pat~ & Tutur• CounMI. Meg M2-1041 lllW Cart delivery (714> 55._7128 Remodel• Keith 84&--4672 clean houM. S-40-0857 nia~ UDaLI Pllll'm Int/ext. fr•"'· M&-8253 WHITE WIZAN> Computerized Bltkpg to DAYS OR NIGHTS Gar••-'•I ONE CALL DOES IT ALLI lt,.eftltle•T'Mrwll 0 ,-__X, Eo, VLING • Int/ext free Mt Local ;ef Pla•W!I ~~~W·~~ sutt your neecta. Aeaa. 0 C Airport Area Meal• a1 _ We fix II, breek It. buy It Have refa. Bed<y 72o.94')5 u"'" C&fv•u • ow rat• 10yr• exp (7 14)1538-&911 - tees. 960-4032 Clay provided. TLC. 852-1007 TIEES or haul It 648-5009 Dependable Houlel<eeper Lie T 138046 552-0410 PAINTER NEEDS WORKI 14 l:n~ A!al~ll l!il""taiiiitt-...Ln ... ____ .. a•iatt ulai Cltaaiat tmct Topped/removed Clean-AMERICAN HANDYMAN Experienced/own Trans. •&-1 ..... * Int/Ext, cel1tng1. refln cab. Speciale on P~Equlp Stat. i:; ~ .!S!.!! Wltlta1/a.. .. 11r.:: _ -up,newlawns.751-3'76 Carpentry, Wlndow1, Cellal50·3263 8"1quallty.25yrup. (26)yr1 e11p ,wcrtguat. Wat-H•·t-• ~· contractort ....... _._ ... ..., *New cablnetl cabinet A-1 Kleanlng n Servloa Pa.Int, fenoee etc. YM Uc. T· 116,426 730-1353 D 1 p 964-3837 ---• ....,..._., wOfk ovw '200 ~ BUikf/m : ofc, klt, rm lacing. bars & lormk;a Bonded/llc'd, we do what llO Jesus 11 Lord. 847-2367 GENERAL OR SPRING av 1 aintlng Dlsposala. Faucett, .ic, labor and metetlelt tnl'9I edd +bay wndw. French countertope 54~5747 you don't have time tor LAN~CAPESERVICES Wlndowt & Appllanoes STARVING COLLEGE Painting. Carpentry. Ora.Ins clear from S15 be Uoenaed. Unllcel.ect dr, patio cov/deeka. Lie Cir t 650-1711 Landecapln~ & Malnt Rep&lr1, Painting. Drywall. Free est, eve'• 852-1007 STUDENTS MOVING CO Drywall & Plum bing. Repair f~a. dlap. etc. contractor• MOutd 90 .......... St "'•7 •"76 ,.. " c LOC"L R FS INS etc Free Mtlmat.. LIC T124-436. lnau.red. Home Condo & office &nutlme M&M ..... 2·""'33 11a~e 1n 1.....-w ..-.-1.1...., .... -..... eve -·vv 1at11cttr1 " · • · Gary 645-5277 PTL Housecleanlng, gen'I & ••1~•"27 ~·7• """ ~ '• ·-· _,....,,_"" . Expert Carpentry service "-l Llc.•46• 15 le I l-.,.. "" Int. Phll 859-0687 ex...n "'--•--& ~-" Contractor• and c:e>n· ADDITION s. DESIGN Repalr-RemOd-Addltlons .... .,. 642-6007 O< 5•5-6974 •·all• spec. c an no spec .. 1111. WATCH us GROWi • ~ -·· ~·-~ IY"*•· cont.act Mary ANO REMODEL Doore-etc 5•8-4980 Ill...,... 1111---~dable. tree estl· l~r 31 )'fl exp. 16 yrs In ., .. _ Grondle at 551-'0M wtltl Lie rea1. Prolesslonal "u ,. .,...,, CLEAN UPSeHAULING mates &46-4232 I a •I f?M G INTERIORS Uc •<609035 964-1919 any quee1Jone. Contr.e- oompl Mrvloe. 631-2345 II you're not snopp1ng Remdodell/dR99Lla'ldr1:bocomdedml L~~EDESCESATPEeTf!~E2 !!!.,M7 SMALL MOVING JOBS Furnish your new apart· Local Painter & Handy· HANGING/STRIPPING tor's Stat e Llo•nte ctass1f1ed. you may be an res c • n • · ""' • .,..., MIKE646-1391 ment with furniture found man. Low rates. neigh-VISA-MC Scott 673-1512 Get • puppy or kitty Board. 21 CMo Center Find what you want In paying loo much Ins. For est: 552·9t42. Have aomethlng to Mii? SELL Idle Items with • through clasallled borhood ref's. &40-8259 through ctasS1fted. and Pla&a. Room eeo. Santa Deity Piiot Cl&salfled1 642 5678 Sell ldl It 642 "'"'78 C ,,..,. 642 55,79 Shop claSSlfied-our store gtve • ~ppy or kitty 10< Ana. CA 92701. · · e ems "<.IV 1a..i,...., •d• do It well. Daily Piiot Clllllfled Ad. • Cl111ifled Ads 642-5678 never closes 642-5678 Chrletmas. 642-5678. 111a~ala 11 .-A• Lett a ftad 30M ltl1 Wu... Siii ltlt Wut.. Siii Btlt Wutt4 Siii ltl Wut.. Siii ltl1 Wu ... ••rt ..,.,.. Found: 4112. sm1 U. Lab ·--I -• -Neel F to ahr 2 br, 1 be mix Must Identity. __..,_OU P·T OlUIO&L PUT Timi IUTU. llllPI. FLllllT general oMce SYDNEY C.M. apt. $300/mo + 'h 752-0530 Sml buslneu nr OC Air-Light typing. nnng, tele-Busy, eMer'ful office leeks OealQner. pert time, ex-Al'TI MM •I• utlls. 549-1694, 632-3530 port. 10 k8)', type .-0 phone receptlonlet. Mon career oriented rec9P-!*'lencled 0< eome exper. In Weatrnln9ter ••need• wpm. own traneporta-thru Fri. daytime hre, pick tionlst. Room for ad· woutd conllder training, someone to handle OMARR N/smkratoahr:4brhouN fOlJNDADS tlon.545-7108 your own daya. Irvine. vancement. ROA p.ref. 4 plMMnt wor1dng con<I. phonH, aome OMV nr SC Plaza $250. Of 3 br &OOlllTlll $5.50/hr Jim 833-83'3 day weetl, PleeM call Newport Beach 751-4706 knowledge hetpfUI, will In N,B. S300. 548-8300 ~ al Offl Nancy &45-7590 food MN\ce train. Call 894-332.2 . ••••••••••••••• Shr tux hme 1Br $285, Pvt AR£ FREE Major Interior design firm wlltr 01 'uk for Jvcty 11 loot<lng for Individual Front office appearance. Dental Sec/Recept/a.cp.r, If you have a dynamic and HOROSCOPE 2 rm suite S375. Roottop with minimum 3 yra PHONES & TYPING 4 dya. RDA Po• also avail outgoing pereonallty, Weclaesday, April 18 patio YU. 1st. last. dep can·. exper. In •II phase• of ac-Apply In narson. 2927 s. soon. CM. 546-3000 then come join . ARIES(~arch 21-A p~l 19): Emphasis o~ travel. broader personal ulll• 962·3«5. 966-8•79 counting 10 T/B. Must Bristol .. c M 966-5252 DISHW...SHeR & GEN'L T ... E LEADER IN FRESH .......... honzons, ab1hty to put point across in graphic fashion. People wilt be ltatala Wulff 2 .. 2·1171 have strong EDP back· · BAl<ED COOKIES. need lr*'dty lndMdual ...... dra n to 0 ·11 fid bl h · G · ground. Non 1moker. CUii/ii--. CLEANING PERSON tor MRS FIELD'S COOl<IES le wtttl front olftoe ~-. '!' y u, W1 con 1 c pr<;> ems. opes. asp1rattons. am 3 Br condo. •nt, houN. 5 •"r' party equipment rental hi 1 f tu d ....-nd cated thro gh tt o d L b I k I .... •--------pleuant environment & IATA llTIY atore. Mon thr Fri. United 'ng or 11 an part ance, _.... ~ 1 1 u wn en w r . 1 ra p ays ey roe. mos. Need May 111. gOOd benefit•. &4 l-4004 "'--time .. lff.bu• po1-tlOn .-1ne. 50 ...-eo- TAU RUS(April 20-May 20): Dig deep for information. realize that 640-1716 Found · Prescription Publishing company In """'tAll.6'5-0760 lt1on1atthBalt>oePenln-curete typlnQ to henCle current in~estment may take time to "mature." What ~ppears to be a Mesa Verde. Local Mtab. glu~ on 18th St. New-ANOTHER WENDY'S Irvine has opening tor lllTll'l lfflll aul• store Appty at Mra reception & ottw offloe setback will eventually rebound in your favor. Know tt, refuse to be famlly-deaperate. Sold port Beach. 9<45-4339 located •t Baker & Fair-Person Friday to •newer tn•"r•..,.. bllll"". P/tlme, Fleld'• Coot<lea, Laguna dutlea In lovefy IUf'fOUnd-Yiew In Co1ta Mesa 11 phone. type lettera. p.ro-m .... uet''::'.: ex~d. ........ Hiiis MalL Management Inga. c.11752~ intimidated by o ne who claims to "lmov. It all."' home, nd by 4/2518• Found: P1 Lab F w/whlte now •cceptlng appll-cas & lhtp book orderl ""' 7 _, training avail. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll regain sense of d1rccuon, Call 241-8181 dya. Eves markings. Poppy& Coast cation• for quality mind-and enter data In com-open &45-l l7 C.M FIUI TI• pay !.~~!!D (Ml) purpose. Focus on public response to your cffons. possible pan nership 549-3537 Hwy. CdM. 675-l327 eva ed people at our new site puter. 261-7192 for appt. DRtVERS/X-COUNTRY p••t/~..:.., ,_,.._.....or 13()..4268 and marital status. First impressions prove correct. Know it. follow Proteulonat Couple de-Found: Small long haired ~~49:' s~nB~~t:en:r~~ com?anlon/Houeelteeper Cal lie. MacGregor Yachts -·-"- through on hunch. You·111eam while in process of teaching others. sires 2Br Home or condo dog. 1blue/1brown eve. 2•5pM Mon-Fri e 0 e to hve w/elderty lady In 163 1 Ptaoenda. C.M. Opportunltle1 avallabte •11111 CANCER (June 2 I-July 22): Gain overall view _ leave fine CdM. NB. Co•t• Mesa by blk/brown/Wl'lt. Weet-• · · · · Costa Mesa. 548-3219 ,.-•• IUJU with the LOS ANGELES PIT, exper only. CM ttore. · d . 1 r: th · S . l . , . I . 7 I 1 I 8 4 . P e r • mlsnater/Sprlngdale nr lllWll'-SllMIAlr --TIMES Clrculatlon 0. 8'5-1500 or 631-5995 points, etat S 10r ano er time. oc1a act1 v1t1es acce crate, diet could man e n t . 5 4 8 . 8 1 O O. H B 89" •910 -9 ""' ~ en••tll $75 per 100. no exper. p· ... ---In our d~ to H•'R CUTTERS t-big 1.. "bca · "Kn · k I · G · · · ~ Telephone operator _._.'"" -s _......... """ "' .,. ta .. e a ting. ow 1t. ecp reso uuons concerning health. emm1. 805-649-9323 7•3pm lhltt. Top pay. 362 P/llme U1l1tant to oper-Part 10< fvll ti~ tart 17'1• door newapaper aalee modern ••Ion ac:ron Sagittarius persons figure m unusual scenario. ,. I SCRAM-LETS 3rd St, Laguna Beach, ate IBM System 23 com· med atety. or deta 9 program. Guaranteed from Balboa Bay Club. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Good lunar aSl'X'Ct co1nc1des with personal •llllH 11 puter Costa Mesa Wiii-send sell addressed hourly wage plu• com-70% commlsalon. magnetism, creat1 v1ty, meetings with exciting, dy namic membt-rs of Ital 2tl2 ANSWERS Anawerlng Service need• Ing to train. Typing sltill stamped envelope 10 mlNk>n Hours: 4pm to 631-7117. 676-5641 $ n telephone operator Vari· and 1peed a definite CRl-53, Box 9014, 9pm Training le p.ro-•--------- opposite sex. It may be necessary t o review. revise and to plan a 60, storage garage. 72• Reduoe. H1rsh ous shifts. 362 3rd St •C. asset. Cell btwn 9 am & Stuart, Florida 33495 vlded. Potential to earn HARDWARE ASST MOR rebuildi ng program. Elements of timing, luck ride with you. James St, Costa Mesa. Laguna Beach 12 noon 957-8191 w--$300 plus per week For Retail exp req'd. 240 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Period of .. confinement" 1s finished. 673"7787 Whack . !(night ••-an lnteiMew. ca11· Broedwey. Lagune Bd'I. You'll have greater freedom of thought, action. Good news received Otlict ltatal1 2tl4 Sobbing~~:~: husband. ~i1~~!~gop~~-F~ construcFt~-ll &mall 957-2361ext, 1204 497-4403. John concemin~ property value. Tensio ns are relieved. you'll feel more 161' WMtcliif Or. N 8 "You love basketball hrs. Wiii train, 495.9754 -" 5 to 10 yeara experl4M'l<le GAAAGEOOOROPENER d · $ 30 1 more than me .. "Well," & layout crew needed. desired, w\11 be 1tutf\ng \•--------secure an m orale will be boostc . Sagittanus and another Virgo play A 1. sq .. ~ 5032 l<*ed husband ... 1 love ••t •&1£1 immediate openings curcuit t>oard1. making Sllftm/m11LLD ··-key roles. gent ..,..1. an .... Yates Contructlon cat>lel. aome llght rMCt't· Good ckMng record Per· LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22 ): Intellectual cunos1t)' 1s ac tivated. You'll $270/up crpts drapes ale you more than vack " Need energetic person w/ Call Bob 960-6035 an1cal assembly. Foun-manent full/time Wiii receive answers to queries, mental processes will be stimulated. Focus t7301 Beach. Huntington PtrHallt 012 llalr for color. 631"1775 Contractor needs exp tain Valley area Call train right peraon Ben- also on home-base. domestic issues and possible shon trip. Taurus. Beach 842•2834 IAIYllTill person 10 54.lperviM pub-5•9-•777 tor appt. efits LIDO GARAGE fi C T I, k J FlCTllY l-llHI DOORS. C M. 642-3766 Scorpio and another Lt bra 1gure prominently. BALBOA ISLAND Marine WE &IE STILL IPfl osta Mesa area. rans-•C wor s pro ects r " SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. ~I): Aura o f glamo ur l'AtSt!> _ sccnano Av upstairs office And running 2• hours a ponalion nee 646-8762 _83_•_--0_8!4_____ fe>< mature Individuals with lllEl&L lfC/W highhghts intrigue. clandestine meeting. real11at1o n that someo ne s225imo 675•8877 day. 7 days• wee!<. Pres-BABVSITIER for 1 child CMl/Ctlfa ltsa factory work e.111perience Full time Dulles Incl works in your i..-halfbeh1nd scenes. You'll locatl· lo!>t article. you could Full service suite/Newport ent this ad and receive a In my home from 8-5 M-F. Olnner & rehet posllions Salary commensurate bookkeeping & typing ~ two mas••ges for the k ""6 8687 with experience. but we $5 50 hr 549-0649 1 · fi · I d b b I d · r: Ctr Two ottlces avail May .... non-sm r ~ • 0nan Call 650-5735 a so gain inanc1a a vantage v o taming pnv1 cge 1n1ormat1on. price ot one .. -, will train Call btwn General office SAG ITT ARIUS (Nov 22-Dec. 21 )' M oon in }Our sign h1ghhght'i : 1ri';:e,;x~ut~!,1~~1~~. OlllGll If IUSIAll Banking COOi 9am-4pm only 496-5761 PT /Tiii PINI OUU Judgment. 1ntu1t1on, personaht}. success through direct appeal!>. Thie; 11200, NB. 644-•492 111 I . UJllll Loa1 Secretary Experienced. Apply before FICTOIY TUlllll Busy ctrcu1at1on otflce can be your power play day! M o ney and love arc featured. promotion 1s Lida Penthouse 2 beaut FILUITll 11am Mon-Fri LUNCH Small parts mtg 3 lhills needs a part/time clerk Outgoing, enthuelHUo adults • part/time ewn- 1ngs. You myst enjoy working with youth and be • Potltive motlvatOf Call for an Interview Ml-70211..,. Hotel lllllT ...,.. 11pm-7am. 5 O.y W.- Exp. p.ref or wtN train also highlighted. Y ou·ll be trusted with m ore authonty and financial furn ottlees evall recept 170.1112 Successful. Independent STOP. 2316 S Fairview. avall. Mature women pref for answering phone• rewards will be increased. & cont rm, Mull aeel bank h•• an Immediate Santa Ana. 557-7004 Apply In person 10-3 pm and dispatching meas--Call Margie. •97-"77 CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan. 19): You'll be in vited to attend 673-•603 DOG OBEDIENCE classes opening In our Newport COSMETIC SALES tVERPACCORP.(EOE) aoes. 1• hou,-. per week. SURF & SAND HOTEL theatrical production or .. media ev ent." Y ou'll have access to l~T IUDI at your home, Rsnbl ~~Pr':8~~a~sm!:: earn xtra SSS Exciting _5•_5_5_P_r_Od_u_c_tion __ Dr_H_B __ Fr1 2'.30-7:30pm. Sat. Laguna BMCh eoe fid . Id 'II be d h ' d. I I ..,,r.,. rates. So Cal. Dog Train· cosmetic co,, own hrs. we F t food lz:z I I and Sun e:00-10.30am. Hotel con 1 entJa ata, you truste wit tn1orma11on regar ing po 1ttca 1000 tt. second floor, quiet Ing School. 963•3388 cial loan documentation as P a res auran · Studenll & homemaket'I ITll.D-.. -• II P t t l 't · I · ht I' t 1· I t 1 1 C""p t train, Linda 673-2751 no experience. over 18 _.. po s. ro cc em ona ng s. rea 1ze po en 1a 1s grea . street, nicely 1andec.aped exper ence n "' ora e 366 enCOYraged 10 apply at AsslSt 10 purdl -t G,..1 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll get to heart of matters. you'll bldg. ott-st. parking. gar· Sllllll U SPA banking environment Des .. tt.s I Slli Oart years 673• 1 330 w Bay. C,M 2-4pm 11 s ..., food a, be stimulated and creative juices will flow. Focus on emotional age avallabte 645-4800 llASlllE ~~1~!~~~ P~=:~:ben· Wiii train Janie 545-1316 Fem, Companion f()( •th· (ask for Debra) :!:~e ~~~n lnven- fultillment, rom ance and opponun i 1 y to make correct business or carer Vicky 645·3323 days Shiatsu, Jacuzzi. sauna. 851•9900 ct1m• I •••El lellc handsome "-5 yr old GENERAL OFFICE tory contrrol can Renee, maneuver Leo and another Aquarian figure prominently Of S fr IO /f Prof female stelf. Open 7 _1111-••-" -male s1oootmo 15 days Busy Cotta M ... office 497-4477 ext •39 · · o. '' •• I I days. 10-2PM, visa & me. -Vil> -" Pert/time Apply In per-otf Live at the beach Call needs an organized & re-SURF & SAND HOTEL PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Your position will be made more Suites to 3000 sift ,.320 Campus Dr. II 190. Ell l /f /Y /. son: Nosek Trophy & En· Answer Ad 635 Uable Individual wtgood Laguna Beach EOS secure, confidence will be restored. Genuine food bargains arc Nr Harbor & Baker NB Across from oc Air-BE"UTICIAN graving. 170 E 17th St 642-•300 2• hrs i kill & k OWied available -know 1t. plan budget accordingl) Emphasis also on 5•9·81 81 dys. 120-144• port 556-2260 Lag~na Beach "117. Costa Mesa - -~P ~~f~ce 5 pro~edure": MllUIPll successful dealings with superiors. governmental agencies. Cancer Oi)en space ottlce In NB. TOP SSS Renee 4g,._1600 DECORATE-Design wtllne Tum to today's ciassmees Heavy telephone contac1 J.paneee lady needed'°' n ative figures prominentlv. desk & lvrn In piece. gd Females pref. Models and art & repros Wiii train for the best buys . w/customer service housecleanlng. Private · water view 646-5015 Eecorts. (213)866-l9M Beauty Salon: Hair Stylist 552-4285 Judy 12-6PM 6"2-5678 exper helpful. 7S4·68A 1 Party &75--0105 I 2900 l "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii needed Must have 1---------.......... ......,....,......,.-....._ Atutatatl, Val. M•I I• -.-.--0---40_1_4 cllentele. Enjoy Balboa IELIYIHHIYEI I •1 p•1 ~ IUDlllPllW ... Baat. ltacla 2740 SEA & SUN LODGE S~~1~1~!~~~d~'g~:~~s ••••HI Jt. Island environment. Good driving record Bring II y I 01 2 nd stiltt. avg 30 hrt/wk Pi~,,.. ......... ml'!"P."'I'~------------$105 wk/up. Color TV lrom Post Olfloe In N.B Olstrlbutors needed /or 673-4013 ask tor Tina MVR Costa Mesa Btu• -------' Str~ 1YpervllOfY skllls llmllTll OllEI 3026 W Cout Hwy, Npt 8•0-5557 or 840-3676 ~:f~e~~od~~-S~~~ Bikini Shop Salesperson. print 1690 Ptec:entia.CM E~~~ r•;A=o'?eL 8211 SAN ANGELO DR. --' II I th be h EL VERY " 1br,2 br & bachelor apte. So. Leg. nr beach & Ritz Sets. Buttons etc. Help u tme on e ac , •I I • GRAPHIC ARTIST ~.!:~~h 4111·":1:,~ Televised security. encl Carlton. lully furn . pvt Spacious 824 sq tt w/full Support US Teem and 63 l -2800 Need extra Income? Be an -... ,. 2 Br. 2 car gar. covered garages. pool. Jae. tennis, entry, pool. shr Ba. color kit In colorful marine set-earn SSS Authorized Bkkp'r. permanent PfT. Independent Carrier for llEIPl/ ... Ullll patio, 'I• mile to bch. clubhouse wllull elCercise TV. empl nn-smkr $350 ting, nr Udo Shipyard Dist (7 14) 5• t-5453 exp. only Newport Beach THE REGISTER Mat1Ke, tor eldeflY lady 1695/mo. 213•925_.796 room, 8•8-1613 & $275 (2 rms) 493-3•90 avail lmmed $570/mo -11-1-1-9-1-1-.... --.--.-0,,...2~4 chrlstlan property man-Must have a dependable Orange County daily newspaper is Weetcends s.ca.-3688 •W>Olup B&eh. t Br Near beach. 2 Br 11;, e a Sa•atr ii~~·~~~~g !v~~~c~1j -H ~~~:,:r" ~7.s'b~~,i cR~ ~';!:~Y ~=~h ''c~~~a Sttking a quick layout artLSt wtth pool, 1pa 18992 Florida, twnhse. bit-Ins. trplc. lt1talt 2906 Lise 675-0132 * t'E~~l-~IEY F sume 10. PO Box 7876, Mesa end Laguna Beech I know ledge of types1nng. re pro-M~~per~~ 811 8•2-2834, 842-3172 encl. gar. $675. 536-0921 Fu rn wk ly ren t e Is Ctaatrcial * FORECLOSURES NB. 92660 areas Call Vicky before duction . camera ready art Must Ix phasee Exoetlent oppty 3Br 2ba $750 +sec. 2 blk1 L11aaa ltac~ 741 April-Sept Steps to ltatala 2911 •BANKRUPTCY •HtllEIPEI• 11am 951-7113 able to get alo ng well with sales re~ Mr Walsh. 650-4708 to betteh. Avail 511 No -ocean/bey * COMMERCIAL s I h l pet•. Yolanda 847-8075 llUllll llllALOW Vitia IHtllt 171·•112 16640 Harbor, F.V *INDUSTRIAL E;~g0a;~~~~~e~/R A:~: ~oX~~ ~1i1 ':~°J'ie/;":~~ and interpret t e1r ideas into a you ts Mlfllll ---------North Laguna BachelO<. -----t2•0 sq It • REAL ESTATE REO T & I Wllh 8 loss of dr11 .. e ? Find l Add1t1onal pro je'C'ts may include {ly-PI T 5pm-10pm El Toro. 2B~B~d'~~~/d :i~~et~~:h·s:~gs·~~' Vacatita A~e~t __ 5_•1_-50_32 te~~~~~~~~1~;:~33 ~:;~\y: so~''!;! a dependable car 1n 1 ers. brochures. maps. and sales pres· ~~~~a~r~7-0~~sion hk-up. gar. trplc . (618) 963-88•5 ltatala 2907 Olllce/Shop/Storage ----Irvine mtg S•0-889• cle.sil1ed 8•2-5678 entatinn v isuals 3 year s ex 1850/mo 962 • 7769 -I ' I 2752 OCEANFRONT· Lovely space 250-350-750' rees Mt1t111t1 penenn• newspapE'r preferablt' .11111111 960-1193 L11aa1 llH Penln Pt. 3BR 3'h ba c Mesa C-2 546-7249 T.D.'a r 4021 St•nd resume o r Jetter of quahf1 PIT Superv\SOf. Leed. & o.IUxe 3Br 2Ba & 2Br 2Ba Lrg 1 & 2 er, gu. w1r, July/A~ Agt 673·9060 Prtme property on Coast -.o.i!~!io'!!'"!"!!~~....,-Janitor Po-'tlons avall-~ln";':x ~?rp1 ~~;:rt ',~tr~o~~ W1t1rfrtatll••t1l11. ~:.,'~,;~'=-~~JI l.HSAnLEI Ct\REER l'3:1;;:~~ ... CU \ ... I IHI" Pl l.OT ~~-::==:-~ No .... M0-4414 pets. 290•1 A~oma. s ••• ., ........... 11. -PRIME VIALIDO s~rl~·l~~.·:~~d OPPORTl':\ITIES ~=~~g~s~:.E~ 9-7PM Mgnr •95• 2~ Call ftr ht1U1 1200 sq ft store, TO'sSlnQe 19•9 1111 I• \II' 1'1111t 11 ,, .. • P 0 Box 1560 portahon & teteph<>M I rt ltac~ 2'161 I rt ltac~ 27'9 IH"trs 111-100 Avail May 1 650-2709 Robt Sattlef NH/CM <.:o;,t.<• M esa CA 9262b Petsonel Int~ only E ..,.tt T A --WANTED: Storage spece. RE Broker Bd RelllO<I Attt•nt1<lll M elinda That•kt>n l -•pm 5 8pm UnWerMI ffi61U ownl'louae pt. 1...... .. ApprOK 300 Sq Fl by 642-2 t 71 5'45-0611 Bldg Malnt 1226 w Flttll 3BR 2b1. 2 car gar. no 1... itoa 511518,. s.-6•8100 WANTED Peopleneedlnn St SantaAna EOE, pets 1825 per mo. -re ~ S "• 6'4-1010. call 8to5. M·F 1•c""'h•a•rmiiil•nn...,A•e11112Ple""r .. c"'on-.,do•. ta•••trial pvt TD SSS 10.ooo up fURHISHCO or UHFURNlSHED. All UTitlTIES PAID. HEALTH CLUBS. TCHNIS. SWIMMtHG. ~j mudl mort! Sotry. • no pm. Modds ~ Newport l«adl So. l 700 16d\ Strttt (at Oowr) '42·511l Ncw,.,t lodi No. 8801n4MA~ (at !61h) 64S..U04 • No credit v . no penalty Quiet 2 Br 1 Ba. patio, g~r. storage. pool. S275 ltatala 2920 Denison A11oc 673-7311 pool. garage. no pets +It utll• 64•-9806 4-8 2006. 2800 l 4000 aq fl $600/mo t801 B 15th St EtBlulf condo stir lmmed 3975 Birch. NB Nwpt Hghtl 650-8213 w/F n-tmkL W/D, pool. S.50 aq tt Agt 5'41-5032 5100 .......... .... ' .. IC S.-00 t Utlll 720-18"9 -lncliatrl., space w/good IUll AlllllT 1 mo tepe to f.. 4Br bet bay &. OOMn NB retail potential. ApproJC mOITIYI Mnd. Nft Cpll, 144! Avall lmmed. 8~~637 7K e.I '1'1/lpptOX. 16K The Or•""• Coast Dally total to mo\19 In 16"tle wknda or •ft 6 "" encl parking aree & 31< · ·• 24th St 213/592-2725 "-to ·"'r 2 Br CM du" .. "· s I office apace Will rent Piiot hU.,, •llcel1ent OC>-rv ... ....... pottunlty for • c.r-.r 50-60 yre. s 140/mo • all or P8f'1. Nr Harbor & l~ ..... M•' A t IMal 2100 utlla 6"6-258• Baker 549-8181 dy1. ~;;.'.,;'119 .;J~' • ~..,;., EmPiO;:;d tadY or etuaent L.lve on bay. M /f . 720-tu.. track record orut Wiii be enug u • bug In S.-00/mo. lit & IHI ~tr I 22 potentl•I. guaranteed lovely rm, pool, kite prlv 975.~97 after 5PM p ator...,..y11td."""" draw agalnat com · nr airport S300 54M'7 40 ---r -.-......., minion Oeelre to move ----.,.---,---Mat ~ to lhr Ira 3 Dr tq n Htwpor1 Hta aree Into ~t • C>W• F· tum rm/~ pool. ape hme $326/mo + r.\ "'"' $500/mo Ml-9831 Mon Send reeume to W/0, Woodbrtdge *275 + S 100 dap Oay1 th, Frt 8·4pm p O Bolt 1660 Ind utll. 551·1&12 85t-5329, tvee 754~&485 .batueftlfttl 2 Cotta Mela.. t2$2t Furn rm In lfg CM hm. M/F 3 BR llou• In Colt• (00\Clng rot a ;not: man. •E•O•E-------•I g')9 ba, kite pt1v l300 ~ .... Non amolter $300 .-0·50 ~ eomeone 10 7t-8781 E/145-8120 & Utll Martt 5'0·1199 have 1 fun re&atlOnthfi> &llHSt• UH Nloe nr beecil, OOMn. ~to Iha.re 2 e7Tiii with I loY9 outdoorl l lnlarlof oealgl'I firm aeek· reap M .. furn. teftlg, TV, Apt. Bell>Oa l•l•nd. love to play tennt.. I wn. Ing bright pereon ~ble wkly 636-1511 S350mo y11rly Non protetelon.i and llY9 In of handllng a v11tety ot R 0 0 m w I ba I c 0 n y , amoltet 875-9564 J«ry Newport 8HCt\ 5'5" & IUnctlOn• POaltlon ,... kit/laundry prlv Went MIF rmmt IMre 2bf 2ba 110 Iba 546-0535 qulrea tight bl{lq>g. ' quiet wortllnQ « 1tuc:tent N 8. OOMntront duplex •Splr11ua1 AMder & Ad· key by toudl and etrong n·emkr '*" l>001/lennl1 ~ ~ utll 845-HM "1MW Advioe In all II,. date ln~t e~ Good Unv M . lf"I. 716-3169 mattwe. loW !Mfrt9Q9 communlcellone atcin. • \It\ I H 11'1'' ,\ I Ill •I" .. 111 I I• I • \110Ullt fC,,,.,,,_ftl• I lit \ f ult• 111 1! 101ull•~O \ ,..,,,~ftrtu, 1u • • "'"'•t • t u•1lul .. t1 "'1tl lu t1 .. u11 tl t 111 t1m,. huu•t, ti•llll"I " • I ~ '. I I • ... \ • l'Hllltl I lltt\ • "''""''"'u 1 '"'tr' j11h1.I fl.H ''"It .... M ,. '" I '" ul \\, ·II• ... iftfT!fW'•l-1\, .... ,., •• OW' tn H••\ 11'1 h I • ,,_, "'''l ''' ' ·~·· •• v , .. ,. 441 i. •tr I• Ith D1ily Pilat M/F to enr 3 br, 2 ba 8 .,. "33n mull .._..,,t anwon l.L tdl• ll•m• wllh 1 Hal/9 aomethlng to NII? condo nr SC Ptau S250 buatMN. N -1·• "' ment end good beMlltt , _a.--.,_ ==Delly===""°'====a===m=lilact==A=d::l=C=l=eaal==fled===llda==l ==do=tl=Wl'l==l=-1.-S-73_-_e_29_2_2_1_3_/4~"=·=2t3===6=.J~W=•=n=t =A=d•~-c.-1_1_e.._2_-se __ 1_8.l N~~ &41-4004 l~~~~ .... ~~~~~~~~1111111 .. 111 Newspaper KIDS -EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! ACE 11 ·14 , EARN ~ ro s1s.oo ro wm Wt AO• Ism I !I °'*"" frol YoWl'I .... Clltflf\ 1°"*11ft radln lof Tllt Of• Ceut Deity Not Olt tl'fft stll1 at l lO II • IM ,.~"""a JO"• .-." 0n Satw8y, .. l'lllO'\ 1 "1r morw llOllrs You wit """ """' tr .. tfld pnm "°'11 "'"' tll1llflt JIN' OWft lllOllty 1 I """ " no ""'"' °' eolllttiofl ........ It pOll "' llltfml.S plpue tll • ('" (714) 548-7058 C8 Orange Cout DAILY PtlOT /Tu.day, April 17, 1984 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZIE ACROSS 60 Lived longer I Eng march than composer 63 W ife of 6 Scrape Abraham 11 Female 66 Asian garb 14 Big 67 -Harbor 1!> -space 68 Roman robe 16 ·--69 Kitchen item Skylark 70 Feet 1 7 Unfresh 7 I Drive back 18 Note hOlder5, 20 Subtract DOWN 22 Unwordy 1 Lotty RR~ 23 LaAd point 2 Old lang 25 Juncture 3 Inclines lines 4 Shoeiace tag 28 Requlfe 5 Organ type 29 Neck.wear 6 Team sport 30 Divers 7 Cut down 32 Income Fr 8 Amerind 34 Sirens 9 q;. or T -man 39 Is on hand tO Glass-mak- 42 Having trust ing m1xlure 43 Of herdsmen 11 Put aside 45 Morning 12 Hungry - reception Dam 46 Calumniates 13 Fac1hta1ed 49 Go wrong 19 KO counl 50 Sellles 21 Neighbor 54 Sptrtl of Can 55 This Sp 23 Punish 56 Dairy 11em 24 Re11g1ous 58 Soil sculpture 2 3 14 17 29 32 39 56 60 66 69 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 26 Anchor 27 Confident 30 Poison 31 Persuades 33 Viet holiday 35 -detector 36 Overhear 37 Slow 38 Metric un11 40 Pull 4 t Market .:4 Remains ~7 Undergdr ment 7 8 9 48 Latest prel 50 News beat 51 An1111es island 52 Make entry 53 MyGal - 55 Related on mother s side 57 Canograms 59 World power 61 View 62 Brown shade 64 Beverage 65 Mr HOibrook UOIPT/mtlT AC1"'9 .-. omoe wtth buty telephones. Central Newport IOCMIOn. Aatt for Cour11and .. ..,., ............ ..... .,. 111-1400 HITAIUIT lmmed openings In French Italian Reataurant tor kitchen and dining area help Wages com - mensurate with ex- perience Call Le Troquet 548· 7 440 ask tor Sylvie ~====~==~~::::;~=====~~==~~~======~=~ Restauranl Ktlt Waatt4 5100 BtlJ Wutt4 5108 BtlJ Wiat .. 5100 IUIEL PfRSll Messenger Mon-Fri. must PHOTO UI Mature good worker we have own trans. Orange Printer w/Norltsu exp will train Full time CdM County 955-0650 Apply in person PHOTO Kennels ~4-8 160 Models Male/Female ON THE GO. 3941-A S llmtH we NEED NEW FACES Needed hand knitters tor For pl&Gemenl in mOdellng sweaters & vests Full or tobs 1n Orange Coun1y pert 1tme Call K & 0 Fine IEW Y-I WEIT Imports. ask IOf Klara ... 786-2794 laltat l&tHJ LEW. SECRETARY Hl-liH Fast paced N B R E Lit OFFICE CUH/ lirm seeks motivated PHSH HlllY exper Legal Secretary This challenging pos req lor busy ott1ce with he&llY exceptional skills & stnct ohones Acctg bkgd help· attention 10 detail Ref's lul 10 key adder a must req 640-6962 Apply tOam-12 or 2·4pm LORI'S llTOllEI LIFEGUARD 3077 S Harbor Blvd (Harbor 111 Carriage) 979-0747 Bristol. Santa Ana Playground supervlScH alementery schl, lmmed PI T. CM area 645-8958 Poot maint. need &<>meone to nelp take care ol pool route 979-0974 PRE-SCIHL n&OllH 8 to 12 noon Mon thru Fn HB area Call 536-3588 Production Plan- ner/Scheduler. pro· gress111e Aerospace Hardware Manufacturer nas 1mmed opening for 1nd1v1dual with ma- ch1ne1aasembly pro- duction experience Preece Inc 770·94 I 1 Mua~:,~:rt~I~ O~•r'-Ille· •OFFicE PIHOI * saving. CPR & Isl Aid 30 For garden center. misc l•--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• hoursfweett. 10 to 6pm indoor. outdoor work PROIOTIOI Please call for appt bet 1•2-1111 9&4. 645-5000. ext. 521 O a S Can you ... ••rtttr I .11, YI Spare 3 hrs nightly? ---Exprd or will train All Are you Live-In needed Mature shifts 540-1777 Well groomed woman. non smoker dependable license driver to assist PUT TIME and aelf motivated? elderly couple with dally LICAL Cl lllllli Do you routine. in exchange for Start at $7 45. seeking 1 t Enjoy working with kids? room. board. & small H S grads. u S c1t1iens II you can answe< YES nlary to start Call hardworkers Need auto Phone646-7021 760-0207 Rel req Call 3-6PM 2 30-6pm Mon lhru Fri MAJH M/F Wlml Hunt Bch 964-2890 Transp req 852· 1005 PART TIMI OIALITT COITROL ---------[Stock & dellvery Must be FI T 0 C audio cassettes UIAIEll able 10 dnve stick shift Min wage Apply Books THE DAIL y PILOT ts now van Hrs opn $4 00 hr on Tape, 729 Farad C M accepting appllcations Mark 644-8860 548-5525 (1111k lor BlllJ for District Managers to Nettle Creek Fashion Isl llUL ESTlU supervise newspaper Part Time. to figure com· •••rs IWl•tE• camers Must have van. missions accurately. 1n ._ • " wagon or plCk·uP Good COM S4 50/hr 759-1150 Ma1or publlcly held real salary. mileage allow-estate company Melts e>e· ance. company benefits pe11enced sales manager and bonus opportunity PART-TIME. Vaned hours rn all phases. com. Apply '" person at Daily lo include early A M merc1al/mdustr1a1 condo Pllol C1rculat1on Ollice weekends Musi have de c:on11ers1on helplul JJO West Bay Costa pendable 11en1cle (small Please reply to sales Mesa Monday lhrv F'rt· truck van station manager p o Bok clay No phone calls wagon110 ass1s1 news-8708 125 Newport E o E paper dealer in Irvine Beach CA 92658· t 708 area Must be depen- cl able Contact Greg Restaurant IECUllC Hyde Monday lhru Fnday lfTOll I CITR. PHSll Experienced w/Brtt1sh between 9 30 and 10 30 !Must speak engllsh Mon Cars Lge t>usy 1ndepen· 1 a m onty 642-432 t I thrv F'ri 7 AM to 2PM dant shop 50"/o comm • Starts S3 75 pet hr Call F1t1me 642·5 133 :,. ________ George alt 2 pm only I• I 432-0677 MedlCal PUT /TIME PAllT TllE PHITIGI W1lla11ll1J lllJ RECEPTilllST I()( thoroughly upenence 1 9am to Spm Driving I Real Estate Investment lront otftce person 1n r ountain valley & Hunt Proless•onal attttudes and busforthoped1c practtce 1ngton Beach to verity appearance required H B area Call 841 6266 newspaper dehvery Re· hght lyping !>49-2988 LORI'S llTOllH has following openings PART /TIME fOOd servtCe worller lor 1 30pm 10 6pm, Mon thru FrL MEAT SLICER & portion control person familiar wtlh Hobart slicer. 9 30am to 6pm. Mon thru Thurs. & Sam to 12 nooo Sun FOOD SERVICE worker lor sandwich & salad prep. Sam to 1 30pm. Mon thru Frt WAITER/WAITRESS with car lor wicker basket lunch service, 9 to I. Mon. thru Fri Earn ap· prox $175-$250 weekly All applicants must be neat. clean & depend· able able to read & speak English Apply be· tween !Oam & 12 noon or between 2pm & 4pm 3077 S Harbor Blvd Santa Ana (Harbor at Carnage) 979-0747 RETAIL SALES Hardware Asst Mgr. retail exp req d 240 Broadway. Laguna Beach John. 497-4403 RET AIL SALES PERSON Benelton Fashion Island Call Gay Koll 833-3030 --SAILS 01tti1r/Stw Full time, 67S: 1823 SALES xlnl oppt y for ag- greu111e women who want to earn b•g SS Easy ror those who can Sell and are ..,.,., 5tarters I 551-2823 Have t0meth1ng you want to tell? Ctusillecl ad• do lt well I Call N OW 642-5678 . Ultle Miss Muttet sat on a hable aulo necessary $5 1r------------------ per hour plul mileage u TD T M Tulfet along c ame a Apply in person at The E spider and read 111 the Daily PllOI Classified Daily Pilot. 330 w Bay, section about M111 Muf-Colla Mesa See Mr fel • Tuttet and bought It i-C•ly•d•e•B•a•rr•etw-•EO_E __ ror $9 95 You can seH you• tuflet and lots of other lh1n11s through Oatly Pilot C1au1l1ed Ad• Call ~2-5678 Thinking or a new home !Of spring? s .. the many lt1tlng1 In lod8y'I ci&all· fi.d colurMa 642-5678 NOW HIRING CASHIERS AND CLERKS IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIES Sell your Items for $50 or /en In our famous DIMES-A-LINES pub- llsh.C each Saturday In the Dally Piiot DIMES-A-LINE ad1 mu1t be pre-tMld so ms/I or bring them Into ,,.. D•lly Piiot office. Be ture to Include your phone numbM Of ad- dren In your ad, h•ve • prlet!J on each Item & no abbrevlatlon1. Sorry, no com~cJa/ ad•. gar• ..-. /NO<IUCft, Pf•nt• or •nfm•I• are ttCCepteble ' CONNELL CHEVROLET '."I..> II.tr l••I II . ol ' I ,.... I \ ,, ~ .... \ 546-1200 ~~ Salea·Servlce-Leulng S,..lalbi11l1 Eire,. .. hlh1ry Excellent Seleetlon of New and Carefully prepared Used BMW'• alwayt In Stock 111-3111 208 W. 111, Santa Ana Closed Sunday LARGE SELECTION OF NEW & USED BMW'SI LllllUOllD VOLUME SALES SERVICE & LEASING 3670 N Cherry Ave. LONG BEACH (No. Che<ry exlt-4-05) ll1•)Hl-llt0 1rad•lns Welcome OPEN SEVEN DAYS MlllllelDU'S SOUTH COUITY lllZU "WE WILL HT IEllHlllU VOiume Sales. Service And Leasing 18711 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach (714) 142-2000 MIHWUl&'I SOUTH oou1n YILllW&IEI "WIWILLIOT IE lllEISILI" Volume Salet. Senlio. And Leasing 18711 Bea<:h Blvd HunUngton Beach (114) 142-2000 WE CARE ......... BILL YATES VW-PORSCHE ':-..111.l•1.1111.q 11,1r.111" 837-4800493-4511 '78 Sevllle. beaut yellow ext w/yellow valore Int. exit cond thru-out only 55K m1 bought new -car must sell $8500 833-0328 NABERS CADILLAC CONNELL CHEVROLET ','\.'><I l.1r I• r I . • I ""I ' ,, I I ~46-1 2 00 &tt!t: Rew v'JJ! equipped for tOWlng boat or trlr gd cond S600 obo 83 1·2516 or 642.008-4 Fer• 1t • I HIGH 71 LOWSI 1:11m11n1 TUESOAV. APRIL 17, 1984 Coast Attorney General Van de Camp talks about chlld abuse and Neighborhood Watch In Costa Mesa./ A3 Biii Harvey says he just can't wait to see what the mailman brings him every day./A3 California A proposed book on killer Christopher Wilder has angeredthefatherofone of his victims./ AS The shuttle spacecraft Challenger takes off pig- gyback from Edwards AFB./A4 !::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Natl on Study shows a full moon does make some people a bit loony./ AS Announcement of Pulitzer Prize winners leaves some winning wordsmlths speechless. /AS World Gunman Inside Libyan Embassy In London kills policewoman and Injures 11 .1M :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::: Mind and Body Legions of well-dressed non-exercisers get a shot In the arm./81 Living past 100 take a bit of deprivation and a lot of cash./81 Sport& Woodbridge Hlgh's baseball team enjoyed a record-breaking day In Easter holiday tour- nament action./C1 The Minnesota Twins roughed up Angel rookie Ron Romanick in a 9-2 victory. /C1 Golden West College's women's basketball team advanced In Its own tour- nament after scheduled opponent Citrus didn't show for the game./C2 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Entertainment Those back lot tours at Universal Studios have been going on for 70 years .. /83 ' :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Business Alan Greenspan says solution to deficit will determine future econ- omic health of U.S./8S INDEX Erma Bombeck B2 Bridge B4 Bulletin Board A3 Bu1lne11 05 Callfornla News A4 Cluslfled C6-8 Comics B.4 Crouword ce Death Notlce1 C4 Hetp Youraelf 82 Horoecope C7 Ann Lander• 82 Mind and Body 81-2 Mutual Fund• 85 National News A4 Opinion A8 Pollce Log A3 Publk: Notlc:el C4-5 Sport• C1-4 Stock Mart<et1 C1-4 Tetevttlon 82 ThMter• B3 w .. th« A2 World Nfta . A4 ~ Toddler may have been sitting been sitting on his father's lap B)' ANDREA ADELSON Of .. .,... ......... A 3-year-old boy died today follow- ing a crash Monday evening in Irvine when his father, believed to be driving under the influence of al- cohol. slammed his car into a water tank at a construction site. police Move over, Goodyear reported. Larry Wayne Davis, 37, was ar- rested on suspicion of felon y drunken drivinJ and vehicular mansftlughter followrne the 8 p.m. accident near the intersection of Ahon Avenue and Toledo Way. Police said the boy. Robert Davis, There'll be more than one blimp cruJ•ing the •kla during the Summer Olympica in Loe Angela. Thi• brand-new alnhlp, deal&ned and built in En&land, touta the virtuea of 0 A ANG l C 0 U N T Y L A l I HJ f • N I A ,"1 ' ~ • .. was rushed to Mission Community Hospital with massive internal in- juries. Despite emergency 'surgery1 the youngster was pronounced dcao today at I a.m. The father was treated for minor injuries at Saddleback Community Hospital before being booked at Orange County Jail. Police. who were still at the acetdent scene late this mommJ. said they believe the child was nd1ng on his father's lap and apparently was crushed between the 11eerina wbttl and his father, who was nuns forward in the collision. "The k.id took most of the impact," noted Lt. Sam Allevato, 1Vho said the child may have been uJcep. "We thou&ht he was aoina to make it." said Sgt. Mike White. "He was m critical but guarded condition last ni'11t and usually that means they·rc going to make it." The father. a self<mployed real estate agent who'd been stayina with Fuji Film. It'• currently underaoln.g maintenance at the Marine Corpa Air Station in Tuadn, then it will ny to Seattle, return.lug in time for the Olymplca in July. friends in El Toro, reportedly .. drivina bis white Dodie Arin oa 1111 wrona side of the road wbm Ill approached the T-inteneaM>n ie die Irvine Industrial Complex. Police said Dav11 a~ missed a stop si&n positioned in IM middle of the roadway and .._red tbrouall a series of barricades belww t his car collided with the l-0.~ wa~tank. The impact of the collision moved (Pleue eee CLUll/dJ , Laguna mulls gay rights Council expected to OK ordinance By DAVID BISHOP Delfr ..... w111, , I Gay rights will be on the aaenda in Laguna Beach tonight as city council membcn consider a locaJ ordinance designed to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation. Mayor Robert Gentry first proposed the measure March l 4 in the wake of California Gov. Gcorae Dculunejian's veto of ABI, a state assembly bill that would have banned discrimination statewide. Gentry, a homosexual who is a leading spokesmctn for gay rights issues in Orange County. fears a "backlash" of resentment and dis- crimination against gays following the failure of AB I. The proposed ordinance 1s similar (Pleue eee GAY I A2) Dentist bids for dismissal By JEFF ADLER Of .... .,... ..... ..., Huntington OKs restaurant on pier Costa Mesa den t ist Tony Protopappas' defense attorneys asked the court Monday to dismiss the th~ second-de~ree murder charges against their chent because of "pros- ecutonal misconduct." The murder trial remained in recess becauS<' of the judge's Ill ness. By ROBERT BARKIR OftMDelfr......... - A controversial proposal to build a $300,000 two-story restaurant and meeting hall at the end of the Huntington Beach pier won approval from the ci ty counci l Monday night. Ci ty Administrator Charles Thompson. who unveiled plans for the fac ility last year. wanted the structure completed in time to cash tn on this summer's tourist trade. But it ran afoul of pier-goers who described n "showy and plastic and rescmbhng a bomb sheller or lifeguard station." There also was a hassle with the Coastal Comm1ss1on o"er parkmg spaces. City officials ordered lrvrne architect Jeffrey Gamer to come up with new plans after the 1mual uproar. But the design accepted by oficials Monday night was vef) much like the onginal one. The motions for dismissal claim Deputy District Attorney James Cloninger withheld evidence from the defense and mttm1dated and threatened wttncsses. Mesa backs parking enterprise It looks li ke a sailboat floating on the Pacific. but the upstairs sec- ond-floor meeting room has been enclosed m glass and there wtll be no outdoor areas where people can throw "dead. stinking fish" as one critic feared. City engineers say more pilings arc needed to suppon the two-stol') building but that work should stan m two or thr~ months. Officially the) predict it be completed by the end of this year. but private!) the) sa' 1t more hkdy will be finished nnt spnng. Defense a nomeys Roben T uUcr and Holhs Dyer also asked the coun to suppress certain evidence m the case. particularly the dental chart of K.tm Andreassen. one of Protopap- pas· three alleged v1cttms. If the motions are dented by Judge Luis Cardenas. who 1s expected to schedule a heanng on the matter later this week. Protopappas' lawyers will ask the coun to dela> the tnal another week to give them lime to review the contested matenal. By KAREN E. KLEIN Of tM D...,,... lwt A co ntroversial Pacific Amphit heatre parking concession ex- pected to result in a $30.000-plus windfall for the Newpon-Mesa Uni- fied School District was approved by the Costa Mesa City Counci l Monday over homeowners' protests. The pay parking operation run by the Boosters' Club at Costa Mesa High School should brine in at least SI 0,000 for school activities and another $20.000 for the distnct's activity transponation fu nd. said Principal Don Champlin. The school is directly across Arling- ton Avenue from the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. where the amphitheater 1s located. About 40 faculty members. stu- dents and parents from the high Ballot propositions start with 16 in this year's state election When Californians go to the polls June 5. they will be asked to render their opinion on nine statewide ball ot measures including one that puts a cap on the amount of money the Legislature may spend on itself, another intended to clean up political campaians and several that would fund construction of county and state prisons. For the first time. however, voters won't be facing a confusing hst of ballot propositions led by Prop- osition 1 and numbered consecutive- ly thereafter. To avoid the confllsion of ballot measures carrying the same desig- nation -such as multiple Prop- osition I 3s, for example -a new state law requires that measure b( numbered consecutively from elcc- t1on to election. Therefore, this year'' crop of ballot measures bcains with Propos1t1on 16. And the num~rin.t cycle, established with the November 1982 elections. will continue for the next 20 years. Ballot measures apptanng on the June ballot arc: • Propo1IU01 11. authoriz1na the sale of $2SO million 1n 'tatc general • " . JEFF ADLER PERSPECTIVE obltgat1on bonds to finance the build- ing, remodelin' and mamtenancc or county J&ll facilities throughout the state. The state Board of CorTCCt1ons reports Cahfomta's county J•ils house 42,100 pnsoners 1n spa~ desianed to accomodate 33,000. To correct the ovcrcrowd1ng problem, the board estimates counties w1ll have to spend S 1.1 b1lhon over the nut 10 years to expand Jails. In Novembfr 1982, state vote~ authonzcd a $2&0 m1lhon bond issue to begin the statewtde Jail cxpaniuon. •Propo1Ulo1 17. s1m1lar to the prcccdma measure. would authonze a SJOO millton bond issue to help (Pleaae Ne BALLOT I A2) • school turned out 1n suppon or the parking operation. which they say ran smoothly after some initial problems last season. Some homeowners from College Park. a nc1ghhorhood across Fa1r- v1ew Road from the amphitheater which has been besc1ged by no1S<'. traffic and parking from the facility. protested the high school parkmg on (Pleaee see PARKING/A2) Take five, Jumbo Huge waves battered the 1.830-foot pier m the 1983 March •aorm. and tore up planking at the end of the p11:r and severely damaged the End ( afr (Pleue He PIER/ A2) The tnal was halted .:\pnl 9 after Cl oninger informed Protopappas' de- fense team his investt$'ltors had unco"ered ne~ evidence m the case. Judge Cardenas agreed to delay the (Pleue .ee DENTIST'S/ A2l One of the Cln:ua Var&u elepbanta e*p a reeplte after the blC top wu bolated Monday for the ahow'a annual run at the <>ranee County Falrgrounct. tn Co.ta Meea. Tbe anlmal and acrob&t mrtraw. •ansa will abow at 1 p.m .• 4:80 p.a .... • p.m. today tb.roqh Thund&J. wlaea clrcUI will mo" ataJn. ' ~U * °'9nQe Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, ApriJ 17, 1984 John Gabriela CONTINUED STORIES ", LB man facing more misdemeanor counts By DAVID BISHOP .._ .... _ ' '1 ~una Beach c1vtc acuvut John Gabn els will be charaed with ad-. ditional misdemeanor oounts of an- noyina and contributing to the delin· qucncy of minors. police said today. Gabricls. 60, who was an unsuc- ocssful candidate in last T uesday's city council election. was booked WcdrtC$day on two counts of annoy· ing children and two counts of contributing to the delinquency of minors. He was released on $1 0,000 bail. Laguna Beach police Lt. Jim White said that more youths have told police investigators of incidents sim1- lar to the one that a 16-year-old runaway &om Los AnaeJes d~ribcd last week. which resulted in four counts ~ins filed ap.inst Gabriell. After bein& sto~ in Lquna Beach for a traffic vtolation. the youth Aid he and his female 14-year-old companion had been supplied with druas and engqed in sexual activity. with Gabri.els during a stay in Gabriels' lquna Beach home. Lt. White" said the several ad- ditional misdemeanor charges arc beiog prepared and will be filed with the Orange County district attorney's office this week. Gabriels rtfuscd to comment on the advice of his attorney. PARKING FOR THEATER APPROVED ..• From Al the grounds that all parking for the I 8.7~scat amphitheater should be at the fan-grounds. The parkan~ program had been denied by the c1ty"s planning staff and Planning Comm1ss1on last month and was appealed to the city council Monday by Ray Schn1erer. business manager for the school district. The caty council unanimous!) ap- proved the parlOng concession. say- ing that 1t would not be detnmental to surrounding homes and that the '>chool would be willing to accept ltab1ht) for the parking lot. ~ hnicrer said distnct funds would ha ~e to be expended to supervise c.ars tl)ing to park m the 1,500-car high school lot on concen nights whether or not the pay parking operation was allowed. "It follows that we should receive benefits of paid parking to offset our costs and earn money for the benefit of the Ncwpon-Mesa Unified School District's instructional program." Schniercr said in his appeal. Several of the booster club mem- bers said the amphitheater, which has been a nuisance to homeowners, bas been a benefit to the school. .. We've fallen into a windfall with the amphitheater being built -it's benefitted us greatly,'' said Anne Kelley, general booster president. "What is a wtndfall to some is a nightmare to o thers." College Parle homeowner Joe Devlin countered. Residents laving near the a mphitheater have asked that all parking be confined to the fair- grounds parlOng lot. Norb Banosik, general manager of the fairgrounds, said there is ample pay parking for c apacit y crowds i n t h e amphitheater's lot. But the off-sa te parking at the high school is more convenient for some drivers and ts popular. Princ ipal Champlin said. "We make about $200 a night and there are SO or 60 concerts scheduled this season." he sajd. He said the boosters will jlet roughly 25 percent of the park.mg proceeds, an additional 25 percent wlll ~o to ot>erating expenses of the parlOog fac1fity a nd about 50 percent will go to the district's transportation fund to benefit all four New- port-Mesa high schools. "The board (of education) spends between $80,000 and $90,000 a year to transpon IOds to athletic and academic activities," C hamplin said. With the pa rking concession off- setting some of that cost, the board would be able to transfer those funds back into improving instruction. GAY RIGHTS •.. PIER ••• From Al to ones c urrent I~ in effect in the cities of Berkeley. Los Angeles, San Fran- cisco. San Diego. Santa Barbara and others, according to a repon prepared by the city staff, which cited the need for such an ordinance "an the absence ofe,usung state and federal restraints on arb1traf) d1scnminat1on based on sexual onentat1on to meet the par- ticular problems of the Cit\:· The populat1on ut 18.000 in Laguna Beach 1scst1mated to tx· from l S to 30 percent g.a) Gentry says he knows of case'> in ~h1ch ga)s feel the~ would lo\e their JObs 1f their sexuaJ orientation were known. The proposed ordinance would provide for redress of discrim ination cases with reference to employment. housin~. business establishments, city facilities and educational instjtu- taons through c1v1I coun action. A coun could issue an injunction against an offender and award monet- ary damages 10 the v1ct1m. Gentry said he expects the proposed ordinance to be passed with the unana mo us !.uppon of city coun- cil. From A l which had to be razed for safety reasons. The $300.000 cost includes the 2.5~square-foot cafe and meeting hall and extra pilings. Financing is provided by an insurance payoff. a grant from Orange County Harbors and Beaches Department and a loan from the Coastal Conservancy. The pier was first built in 1914 and rebuilt m 1940 after the devastating storm of 1939. The demolished End Cafe once was occupied by troops manning machine guns who were guarding against Japanese attack 1n the early days of World War II. DENTIST'S TRIAL ... Supponers say there's an e ight-foot drop at the end of the pier and visitors should see only the top of the two-story building "which wall ap- pear like a boat gen\lY sailing in the Pacific ... From A l tnal so that the defcm1.· attorne)S could re' 1e"' the matenal once 11 was turned O\.Cr b~ 1he prosecu11on Tuller told reponers thr new ma- tenal mcludec; fi \I..' hour~ o l tape recorded inlen 1e"s with witnesses. follow-up police repom and a hand- wn11ng expcrt"s anal~s1s of cena1n pertinent matenal Cloninger declined to d1~cuss the nature of the ne w evidence. but said the defense allegation that witnesses were intimidated was "without substance " He added there was "no ment" to an) of the claims made b) Protopappas· attorneys and that there was "absolutely no supress1on of endence in this case." Protopappas. 38. as charged w11h the deaths of three patients who died followin~dental treatment at his 19th Street clinic an 1982 and 1983. The three -Andreassen. Patricia Craven and Cathryn Jones -are alleged to have died as a result of the improper administration of general anesthesia. The tnal. which beg.an March 28 after a two-week Jury selection pro- cess. onginall) was expected to last from two to three months. CRASH ... From A l the water tank about JO 1nche!.. said Sgt. Mike White. He did not know how much water was in the tan!.. but said o nce that is determined. officers wall be able to calculate the speed at which Davis was driving. Officers speculated that Davis ma) have been looking for a friend at the time of the accident. BALLOT PROPOSITIONS FOR 1984 ... From Al finance the construction. remodeling and maintenance of state prisons. tate o fficials say the money 1c; the second inc rement of an estimated SI I bilhon needed to enlarge the state pnsons to accomodate the estimated S::!.000 inmates e~pectcd to be serving sentences in C'aliforma b) 1987. Currently, the state operates I::! pnsons. des1gnc:d for 26.600 inmates and holding about 39.000 If JO m:w pnsons arc hutlt. "" planned. an add1t1onal $5~4 m1ll1on '-"Ill he needed •Proposition 18 ~11uld Julhontl' 1he c;alc of $370 m1l11on 1n s1atl' general obhg.auon hond-. to linanLc the acqu1s1t1on and c.Jnclopment uf 5tate and local park., and coastal rc'>ou rce areas 'one ot the m o nc) could be spent unle.,., :illocated hy the Legislature • Proposition 19. ~ould allo"" the state to sell $85 million in bond\ to fund the Fl\h and C iaml' l nhante, mcn1 A.1 t of 1984 If pa\c;1.·d. 11 would allow the Wildhk < 11n<,1.·natmn Board and the 5tate C oa\tal <.on- ~rvanc:r to purcha.,l' marc;hland" wetlands and arl'a'\ h;1rhonng en- dangered '\pecie\ Just Call 642-608 6 D•lly Piiot Dell very le Gu•r•nteed •Proposition ZO would require that an} person elected to federal. state or local office m California forfe11 the o ffice 1f Judged guilty of libeling or slandenng their opponent during an election. The measure ts an effon to answer increas1 ng concerns over cam- paign smear tactics and charges. som e times false . le,elcd an last-minute "'hll pieces'' and mailed 10 voters. •Proposition 21 would convert public p1:ns1on fund aso;cts. 'iuch as the .if)().000-memtx·r State Tcacheri;' Retireme nt 5,.,tcm into trust lund'i, 1hus remo' 1ng tons11tu t1onal restnc- 11ons on the l) pc'i of tnH''itments the fund., are permuted to make. The wa> the fu nds present!) arc struuured. fund trustees are not ht'ld accountable no r arc they personally liable for bad '"'e'itmcnt., they might make Also. the) are limited in the types of ">ecunt1es 1n which the> can '"'est. l nr instance. the) are not ~rm1tted ltrnwn more than S percent of any com pan)·~ rommon ~toc k. If pa!.sed. the measure would re move 1nve'itment rec;tnct1 ons. set mm1mum performance standard'i for trustees and would hold trustccs personally liable for bad tn\ est men ts •Proposition 22 wo uld e 'empt from Cl" II service status certaan management pos111ons in the state's two largest retirement system~. lhc Public Emplo)ce's Retirement S)s- tem !S20 billion in assets) and the State Teacher's Rcurement Sy~tcm ($ 11 b1ll1on an assets). •Proposition 23. a const1tut1onal amendment exempting buildings ups. graded 10 meet local safet~ seismic slandard'> from propc rt ~ ta\ asse~sment<, as new cons1ruc11on •\nother ncep11on to Propos111on I I. ll would permit lando.,..ners a n l'\· empuon from fair-market appra1..al of propen~ upgraded to meet local earthquake \afel\ ordinances. •Proposition ·24 is probahl) the most controversial measure on the ballot 11 pas .. ed. 11 would limit the amount of monc~ the Legislature spend'> on itself and would alter rules governing lcg1slat1ve operations. Known as the Gann lnit1at1ve. the hallot propo'>ll1on would dilute both thl· As~mbly <,peaker's power end the po" er of the maJonty party, present I) 1he Dcmoccats. an running the Legis- lature What do you like aboul the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number at left and your message will bf recorded. traotcrtbtd and delivered to the appropriate editor. Tbe same U -bour answering service may bt used to rtt0rd letters to Ille editor oo any topiC'. ('ootrlbutors to our Letters column must Include tlttlr name and telephone numbu for verification. No clrcalatlon calls, ple .. e Ttll us what's on vour mind ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwartz Ill Publisher Clrculatlon 71"842-4333 ClaHlfted advertlelng 71•1"2·5871 All ottt.r department• M2-4321 MAIN OFFICE ))() W""' fl•y .,, t• .. I• M-1 A M•·• tld<1,f>t• • • ,.,liO < ..,,. 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Temperatures All>My AIOuquwQue Amwlllo MehOt• AIMYllN Atle/\la M1-nllc: Ctty Auttln lleltlmOH ~ Blwnetc:tc 9olM eo.ton Btawt ..... lklflelo Hlw S3 49 73 '3 115 33 37 33 ~ 39 58 45 Ill 49 79 40 83 41 78 48 St 47 81 30 79 49 47 .. 12 57 41 S8 T ides TOOAY S.oono IOw 3 48 p m Secood high 10.03'.f m ftDNlaDA Flu! low 5_05 e m F'IHI hlQll II 3 11 m ~IOw 4 24 pm 8eooi1d h!Qh tO 40 p.m ·~ 88 84 47 84 83 49 43 71 40 84 48 12 es 1 2 e o Sun Mta toeley et e 20 p m . ••-w~ ei 5 10 •"' enc1 Mta eo.ir. •t 1.20 pm Moon ,,._ tOCS.V •t 9 SI p m , -W~9104 la.m end-~ el IO:Otlp.m Mtllnuk• Mpl94t PIUI N_,,Yllle NewOOMN New YM NorfOlll Nonll Ptene Oklehome Chy Omehe OftenOo PlllmSpnnge ~ .. "'-Wx p~ p ,Me Por1lend Ote p,~ ="Qty ... N AMo 74 42 eo u ~ .. .. 54 .. It Loull .. ,. .. 41 St ....... T-c»e 71 12 57 60 SlllllAll• 1't 51 12 51 Sen AnlonlO 71 41 83 28 Sen Olfoo 1' 9$' 82 43 Ian,.,_._ 67 4f 87 35 S181elilar1e 6S M 74 52 ... ttle ~ 31 102 71 ~ 46 55 II() Sioux F• .. ,.. 101 n ~ ., 43 90 41 s.,._ .. 31 45 •• ToPel<• 15 :M 81 Je TuQQI\ t5 12 49 41 TIAN J6 45 87 45 WuNnglon .. ... INI 31 Wlcfllt.e ... 37 am CC*DfTIC* 1-3 leir 1-3 poot 1·3 poot 1-3 poot 1-3 poot •·2 poot 1.:1 ..., s.... dlrectlOft. ~ NB 'Don Juan' pleads innocent, posts bail 8y STEVE MARBLE Of IM 0.-, .... aleft A wealthy Newp<>rt Beach man has pleaded no t guilty to charges of sexually assaulting eight women. some of whom were allegedly lured to his ho me by newspa~r ads and promises of exotic gifts and va- cations. Paul William Jensen. 40, appeared Monday in Harbor Municipal Coun . where he was taken into custody. He later was freed after posting S 150.000 bail. '\ preliminary hearing to de- termine if Jensen should stand tnal on 16 felony counts. including rape, kidnap and rape by obJect, was set for May2. Jensen allegedly attacked the women after luring them to his Court Street residence near the Newpon Pier through newspaper ads and af\er meeting them at local nightspots. A former computer salesman at Microdata Corp., Jensen has dc- scnbcd the charges against him as "bizarre." He could not be reached today for f unher comment. South Laguna tenants sue mobile home park owners Jensen was initially arrested and releaScd on S50,000 bail early this month m connection with alleged assaults on three women, according 10 Deputy Distnct Attorney Rick King. But after newspaper articles detail- ing the alleged rapes, fi ve more women came forward with new allegations. Sgt. Paul He niscy said. Henisey said police bave been contacted by as many as 18 women who claim they were attacked by Jensen. The police detective &aid some of the women were unwilling to press charges. Other cases were so old that the statute of limitations precluded criminal charges from being filed. he said. By JEFF ADLER Of the 0.-, Not •left The million-dollar lawsuit filed b' the tt'nant!) of the Treasun: Island Mobile Home Park in ·outh Laguna against thl' park's o"ners went to m un Monday. The Treasure Island Tenants As- soc1at1on sued park owners cla1m1ng they had engaged in a "pattern of harassment and int1m1dat1on" and had 11leg.ally retaliated against park residents. many of whom are elderly. after two earlier lawsuits challenging the conversion of the park to a ume-sharc reson were fi led. The lawsuit. which as being tned an two phases in Judge John Flynn Jr.'s Santa Ana courtroom. asks that park ' r ' ·-. ·~· • owners not only be ordered to reimburse residents for approximate- () $500.000 they were charged in t•·<ecssi' e rents. but also that the o""ners be assessed SS00.000 m pun1t1vc damages. A Judge wall rule on lhe leg.al merits of one pan of the case while a jury will hear and dec ide the second part. according to Ellen Winterbottom. the Irvine attorney representing the ten- ants' association Winterbotto m said she expects to call about I 8 witnesses during the course of the estimated week-long trial. The lawsuit as the third of three legal actions challenging park owners and their nght to conven the mobile home park to a time-share resort, Easter egg h unt Candy and prizes will be provided dunng the annual Easter Eu Hunt scheduled Saturday at the i:"ountain Valley Recreation Center. 16400 Brookhurst St. The hunt. co-sponsored by the Fountain Valley Jaycees, is open to children up to 9 years old. For more information. call 839-861 I. Airportef Inn Hotel 18700 MacArthur Blvd. Ac rem from f ohH Waynt .-11rp<'rf IRVlNE Rl"Sl'rv a ll on" (714) 833-2770 a • HIQH71 r ..., LOWSI, • TUESDAY. APRIL 11 . 1984 Coast Attorney General Van de Camp talks about child abuse and Neighborhood Watch In Costa Mesa./ A3 Biii Harvey says he just can't wait to see what the mailman brings him every day./A.3 California A proposed book on klller Christopher Wiider has angered the father orone of his victims./ A.5 The shuttle spacecraft Challenger takes off pig- gyback from Edwards AFB./A.4 Nation Study shows a full moon does make some people a bit loony./ A.5 Announcement of Pulitzer Prize winners leaves S0"1e winning wordsmiths speechless. /A.5 World Gunman inside Libyan Embassy In London kllls policewoman and Injures 11 ./A.4 Mind and Body Legions of well-dressed non-exercisers get a shot in the arm./81 Living past 100 take a bit of deprivation and a lot of cash./81 e 1 Move over, Goodyear There'll be more than one blimp crublng the aklea durt.na the Summer Olymplca In Loe Angeles. Thia brand-new atnhlp, designed and built in EDfland, toata the Yirtaes of e 1ncras sen, Fqjl Film. It'• currently undergoing maintenance at the Marine Co1p9 Air Station in Taatln, the.a ft will Oy to Seattle, retarnfnl In time for the Olymplca In July. 1 Toddler may ave been sitting on his fa th er' s lap By ANDREA ADEUON Of ................ A l·year-old boy died today faUow- lna a crash Monday evcni111 an lmac when his father, believed IO be driving under the influence o( • coho!, slammed his car into a water tank at a construction site, policC reported.. Larry Wayne Davis, 37, wu •- rested on suspicion of felony d.naUCa drivinJ and vehicular mansla\Wb* follow.ng the 8 p.m. accident near I.be intersection of Alton Avenue IDd Toledo Way. Police said the boy, Robert Davia, was rushed to Mission CommWlity Hospital with massive internal iD- jurics. Despite emergency IW'IC1l· ..., the younpter was pronounced dead today at I a.m. . The father was treated for minor injuries at Saddleback Community Hospital before being booked at o~ County Jail. Pohce. who were still at the accident scene late this momi~ said they believe the child was ridina on his father's lap and apparently wu crushed between the steering wheel and his father, who was Ouna forward in the collision. "The kid took most of the impact." noted Lt. Sam Allevato, who said the child may have been aslccl). "We thought he was going to make (Pleue eee CRASll/A2) Dentist bids for dismissal By JEFF ADLER Of .. Dellr ........ Sports Huntington OKs restaurant on pier Costa Mesa dentist Tony Protopappas' defense attorneys asked the court Monday to dismiss the three second·deJree murder charaes against their client because of ••pros- ccutorial misconduct." The murder trial remained in recess because oftheju~·s illness. Woodbridge Hlgh's baseball team enjoyed a record-breaking day In Easter holldaytour- nament actlon./C1 The Minnesota Twins roughed up Angel rookie Ron Romanick In a 9-2 victory. /C1 Golden West College's women's basketball team advanced In Its own tour- nament after scheduled opponent Citrus didn't show for the game./C2 Entertainment Those back lot tours at Universal Studios have been going on for 70 years . ./83 :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Business Alan Greenspan says solution to deficit will determine future econ- omic health of U.S./85 INDEX Erma Bombeck 82 Bridge 84 Bulletin Board A3 Bu1lneas BS California News A4 Claaalfled C6-8 Comics 84 Croasword C8 Death Notices C4 Help Youraetf 82 Horosco~ C7 Ann Lan<Mra 82 Mind and Body 81-2 Mutual Fund• 85 National Newt A4 Opinion Ae Pol~Log A3 Publle Notice• C4-5 Spo~1 C1~ Stock Market• C1·4 Televttton 82 ThMteta B3 WNther A2 World Newt A• By ROBERT BARKER Of tlle Delly ,... • ..,. A controversial proposal to build a $300,000 two-story restaurant and meeting hall at the ..end of the Huntington Beach pier won approval from the city council Monday night. City Administrator C harles Thompson, who unveiled plans for the facility last year. wanted the structure completed in time to cash in on this summer's tourist trade. But it ran afoul of pier.goers who descnbed it "showy and plastic and resembling Ballot proposltions start with 16 in this year's state election When Cahfomians ao to the polls June 5, they will be asked to render their opinion on nine statewide ballot measures including one that puts a cap on the amount of money the Legislature may spend on itself another intended to clean up political campaia.ns and several that would fund construction of county and state prisons. for the first time. however, voters won't be facina a confusina hst of ballot propo itions led by Prop- osition I and numbered consecutive· ly thereafter. To avoid the confusion of ballot measures C&J'TYlna the same desia· nauon -such as multiple Prop- osition l 3s. for eumple - a new state law requires that measures be numbered consecutively from cite· tion to election. Therefore. this year's crop of ballot measures be&ins with Propos1t1on 16 And the numbcrin&cyclo, Mtablisbcd with the November 1982 elections, will continue for the nc~t 20 years. Ballot measures appcarin& on the June ballot are: •Pro~lltlo• 11, authonzmg the sale of USO million 1n natc acncral • JEFF ADLER PERSPECTIVE obliption bonds to finance the build· in&. rcmodehn' and maintenance of county jail fac•tities throuahout the state. The state Board of Corrections repom C.hfomia's county jails house 42.100 pnsooen in J*C dcs'ined to accomodate 33,000. To correct the ovcrcrowd1na ptOblcmi the boa.rd estimates counties ""11 have to spend SI.I billion over the next 10 years to upand Jails In November 1982, state voters authonted a $280 m1Jhon bond issue to beain the slAt~dc ~ail expansion. •P"ropMltJOll n . 11m1lar to the prcccdina measure. would authonzt a $300 m1U1on bond issue to help (Pleue ... BALLOT I Ai) a bomb shelter or lifeguard station." There also was a hassle with the Coastal Comm1ss1on over parking spaces. City officials ordered Irvine architect Jeffrey Gamer to come up with new plans after the m itiaJ Take five, Jumbo uproar. But the design accepted by oficials Monda[ night was very much like the origina one. It looks like a sailboat Ooaung on the Pacific, but the upstairs sec· ond·floor meeting room has been enclosed in glass and there wtll be no outdoor areas whe~ people can throw "dead. stinking fish" as one critic feared. City engineers say more pthngs are needed to support the two.story building but that work should start in two or three months. Officially they predict it be completed by the end of this year. but pnvately they say it more likely will be finished next spring. Huge waves battered the I .830-foot pier in the 1983 March storm. and tore up planking at the end of the pier and severely damaged the End Cafe (Pleue eee PIER/ A2) One of tbe Clreaa Vu:&u elephant8 8*111 a reeplte after the blC top wu llolated Monday for the ahow•e annual nan at the OfaDCe County Patraroa.nd8 lD Coeta The motions for dismissal claim Deputy District Attorney James Oonmgcr withheld evidence from the defense and intimidated and threatened witnesses. Defense attorneys Robert TuUer and Hollis Dyer also asked the court to suppress certain evidence in the case, particularly the dental chart of Kim Andreassen. one of Protopa~ pas' three alleged victims. If the motions arc denied by Judee Luis Cardenas.. who is expected to schedule a hcarina on the matter later this week, Protopappas' lawyers will ask the court to delay the trial another week to give them ume to ~view the contested material. The trial was halted April 9 after Cioni nger in formed Protopappas' ~ fenst team his invcsttf1tors bad uncovered new ev•dencc tn the ~ Judge Cardenas agreed to delay the (Pleue Me DSl'fTIST'S/ dl 0nnge Coeat D>JLY PILOT/Tueectay, Aprll 1'7, 1964 ~-~~~~~-~----..-------------~--1 I John Gabriela .. LB man f&cing more misdemeanor counts BJ DA YID BISHOP D91W"'4www1 QI f l 1 ~una Beach c1v1c acuvut John Gabriels will be cbargcd with ad· ditional misdemeanor count' of an· ooying and contributing to the delin· quency of minors, PQlice s.a1d today. Gabriels, 60, who was an uosuc· ccssful candidate in last Tuesday's city council election, was booked Wednesday on two counts of annoy· ina children and two counts. of contributing to the delinquency of minors. He was released on $10,000 bail. Laguna Beach pohce Lt. Jim White said that more youths have told p0lice investigators of incidents sim1- la.r to the one that a 16-year-old runaway from Los An&cles described last week, which resulted in four oo~nts bei"J ftled apinst Gabriela. After bo101 stoPDed in Lquu Beach for a traffic vfolation, the youth said he and his female 14-~-old companion had been supplied with drugs and enuaed in sexual activity with Gabriels -during a stay in Gabriels' Laguna Beach home. Lt. Wtute said the several ad· ditionaJ misdemeanor charges arc bcinJ prepared and will be filed with the Orange County distnct attorney's office this week . Gabricls refused to comment on the advice of his attorney. Clouds to depart, but not the cool Clouds that brought an abrupt end'to spring's sizzling summer-like weather wall be gone Wednesday. the Nauonal Weather Service says. but temperatures will remain lower. valleys. A high of84 was recorded Monday at the Ca vie Center. On the~oast. muchcoolcrdaysareexpected. with h1ghsof65 to 75 on Wednesday. Mountain areas wall be brushed by nonheast winds of up to 30 mph and cooler temperatures ofbetwcen 55 and 65 degrees are likely. forecasters said. In the northern dcsens, gusty southwest winds will decrease with highs ranginf bctween 69 and 82. In the southern deserts. highs w1l hover between 84 to 90. lo Los Angeles. highs 10 the lower 70s were predicted. while the mercury could stretch to the middle 70s in the CRASH KILLS 3-YEAR-OLD BOY ..• From Al 1t." said Sgt. Mike Wh11e. "He was in cnt1cal but guarded cond1t1on last n1$ht and usually that means the) 're going to make 1t ... The father. a self-employed real estate agent who'd been staying with friends in El Toro. reportedly was driving has white Dodge Anes on the wrong side of the road when he approached the T -intersection in the Irvine lndustnal Complex. Police said Davis apparently missed a stop sign pos1uoned in the middle of the roadway and slammed through a series of barricades before his car collided with the I O,()()().gallon water tank. The impact of the oollis1on moved the water tank about 30 inches. said Sgt. Mike White. He did not know how much water was in the tank but said once that is determined. officers will be able to calculate the speed at which Davis was driving. DENTIST'S TRIAL •.. From Al trial so that the defense attorneys could review the matenal once 11 was turned over by the prosecution. Tuller told reponers the new ma- tenal includes five hours of tape recorded interviews with witnesses. follow-up police repons and a hand- wnting expert's anal}s1s of ccna1n pertinent matenal. Cloninger declined to dlSluss thl.' nature of the new e' 1dencc. but said the defense allegauon that 'ol. ttnesses were 1nt1m1dated was "without substance." He added there was "no merit" to any of the claims made by Protopappas' attorneys and that there was "absolutely no supression of evidence in this case." Protopappas. 38. is charged with the deaths of three patients who died followin$ dental treatment at his 19th Street clinic in 1982 and 1983. The three -Andreassen. Patncia Craven and Cathryn Jones -are alleged to have died as a result of the improper admimstratton of general anesthesia. The tnal. which began March 28 after a two-week JUry selection pro- cess. originally was expected to last from two to three months. GAY RIGHTS ORDINANCE ••• holaAl the llblet1ce of exlatlng state and federal restratntt on ltbftrery df8Cf'lmtnatk>n baaed on sexual Ot1en1atloo to nMlt the particular probfem8 of the city.·· The populatfon of 18,000 ln Laguna Beadl as ••aated to be from 15 to 30 p«cent gay. = MYJ tMt .knowe of C8MI In which gays feel ._, loM their Jobi tt tnefr eexuel oritntatton .. 1Cft0Wn. The ptopoeed ordinance wouJd pr<Mde for Officers speculated that Davis may have been looking for a friend at the time of the accident. PIER ..• From Al which had to be razed for safety reasons. The $300,000 cost includes the 2,500-square·foot cafe and meeting hall and extra pilings. Financing is provided by an insurance payoff. a grant from Orange County Harbors and Beaches Department and a loan from the Coastal Conservancy. The pier was first built in 1914 and rebuilt in 1940 after the devastating storm of 1939. The demolished End Cafe .once was occupied by troops manning machine guns who were guarding against Japanese attack in the early days of World War II. Supponers say there's an eight-foot drop at the end of the pier and v1s1tors should sec only the top of the two-story building "which will ap- pear like a boat gently sailing in the Pacific." BALLOT PROPOSITIONS FOR 1984 ... From Al finance the construction remodeling and maintenance of state pnsons State officials sa} the mone} 1s the second increment of an estimated SI I btlhon needed to enlarge the state pnsons to accomodate the estimated 52.000 inmates expected 10 be serving sentence\ in C'ahfom1a b} 1987. Currently. the state operates 12 pnsons. designed for 26.600 inmates and holding about 39.000. If 10 new prisons arc built, a., planned. an additional $559 million w1 II he needed •Proposition 18 1.1.oukl au1hunn· tht· ~le of $170 mtlhon 1n statt· general obhga11on bomh to financt' the acqu1s1t1on and dcH·lopment of state and local park<; and coastal reso urce areas !'.one of the mone' could be spent unle~s allocated b~ the ~1slature • Proposition 19. 1.1.ould allo1.1. thl.' ~late to sell SSS m1ll1on 1n bond!> tu fund the Ft!>h and (Jame Enhance- ment .\ct of 1984 If pas..cd . II -would allo1.1. the Wildlife ( onscn a11on Board and the tate ( uastal c on- scrvancy to purchase maro;hlands. wetlands and area'i harboring en- dangered species Just Call 642-6086 O•lly Piiot Dellwery I• Qu•ranteed V ..... .,., r •l•'t' i I ' ,. • .,,. '""'' r-.r .. 'r ~ ')lj m • c-• ,,...,,. ~ '°"" ~' cit t-ei ~-~ •Proposition 20 would require tha1 any person elected to federal. state or local office 1n Cahfom1a forfeit the office 1f Judged guilty of libeling or slandenng their opponent during an dect1on. The measure is an effon to answer increasing conce rns over cam- paign smear tactics and charges. sometimes false, leveled 1n last-minute "hit pieces" and mailed to voters. •Proposition 21 would convert public pension fund asscw>. such as the 400,000-memhcr State Tt"achcrs' Retirement ~~o;tl·m . into tru!>t funds . thus rcmo' mg con!>lltutional rcstrK- t1on!> on thl' type' of investments the funds arc permitted to ma ke The wa} the funds prcsentl> arr ~tructured . fund trustees arc not held accountable nor are they personal!)' liable for bad m' cstments the} might make .\lso. the\ are limited in the t~pes of secunt1es in which they can IO\e5t. For instance the)' an~ not permuted too"'n more than 5 percent of an~ com pan) ·s common stock If passed. the measure would r<.'mo' e investment restncttons. set minimum performance 'itandards for trustees and would hold trustee s personal!} liable for bad investments. •Proposition !! would exempt from civil service status cenam management positions in the state's two largest retirement systems. the Public Employee's Reurement Sys- tem ($20 billion in assets) and the State Teacher's Retirement System ($11 billion in assets). •Proposition 23. a const1tutional amendment exempting buildings up- graded to meet local safety seismic st andards fro m property tax assessments as new construction. Another exception to Proposition I J 11 would permit landowners an ex- empuon from fair-market appraisal of propeny upgraded to meet local earthquake safety ordmances. •Proposition 24 1s probabl} the most controversial measure on the ballot If passed, 11 would ltm1t the amount of mone} the Legislature spend' on 11sclf and would alter rules governing leg1slatt\C operations. Known as the Gann tn1t1auve. the ballot propos1t1on would dilute both the Asscmbl) speaker's power and the po~crofthe majorit) pany. present!) the Democrats. m running the Leg1s - latun· What do you Ilk<' about the Oally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number at left and yo ur messaRe wlll b~ recorded, transcribed and delivered to I.be appropriate editor. ' The same %4-bour an1wertng service may ht ustd to rtcord letters to tbe editor on any topic. Contributors lo our Letters <'Olumn must Include tbelr name and telepbone numtw>r for vtrUlcatlon. No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's on your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schwertz Ill Pubhsher Clrcul•tlon 714/M2~ ClaHlfled edverttllng 714/142·5171 All other departmenta M2-4S21 MAIN OFFICE L~ 1111 .... "41,5• l ~··-C A t,10 •""'"'• f', , IV -O ~111 ... _ Cl ~;>f>;>fl Chezy Dow•llby A0Mm1ry Churchmen C >rilrollpr (I('• •1"' Clp) °'•• ~ ..... p~ {,""""'"" .... ,.., "CW'" , .• ,'(nt, ..,, ., •' mau .. {II" .~, .. ·~1\ ~ ... ""•Y (ti~ flltCl"~1 A th(\J~ ~-.:. f~ """""' l)f .. , •''11"' ...... Clrcul1tk>n Telephone. 'Y' •• •1 I <j11 1r ;tnd Ass1sta n1 10 t hP Pubhsher ltephen F. Ceraio Oklrte A. PoW«e O•'f"C.'c'' or "'-""""'"'"ll Pt0<.)i11 t • '-41 · 'Y"' Donald l . Wllllam• 1t1 uf4f r 1,.4,., ~I.I~ VOL 17, NO. 10I Fair skies and much cooler air ~·lt()(lel w ••• ,,., S..vtC~ COUtal ""*""°" .. .. CllllPlf ,. M Ctwtelilon.LC • 63 '111t:i:--111gt1Ulw~mld °'*"""°"· w v to 44 =:.H.C. .. ~ :::r..:: ............ .. .... ..... ... lllllM.,.... g:~ 43 II ~ lonlgM .. IO ... .. 41 ,,_~~··Ilia ...... ~ .. ,., Uri lkltW MCI OUI IO,,... -IMW ~.SC Sf ..a ....... l..,..._.... ....... MCI ColuMM 61 42 ~ llOufl ~'°""'"'' '° ~FIWor111 .. 45 WMt IO 11 knott I to 1-tooc ~on 5t 40 wltlCI --~ .... ""--~ .. H :::\ lloUrt I Md Wedi I!\ O..Molnee 12 3& w 1M11t1oa,_.,,. o.trol1 12 H Clloudytodey. '"'=I MCI~ °"""" 13 33 Cl9y WleCll -I lfld "'°"*'II EIPMo 17 42 10w alol;ds rMltrlt -.!herll ...... F lllr1lenlll 3e 22 <Mer ....,.: Smell orell ~ Flf90 12 2t trom POll'lt eo,-c,tton lo S.n ~"' 1• 33 ~lllendlor~~20 0,wtF• 12 57 10 36 •no11 """" ouet• 10 40 '"'°'• Ind GOmblned -• to 12 .... ~ Ind Hlrtlord ..a "5 NOAA US Oeol 01 C~~ Fronta COid .,.. Warm .,.. Occluded W'IP Stationary•• ~ 7t .... =' W1nCI _, -a.a:-= ~ 12 10 Mllweua• '4 3t ""'° 74 ., MplMll.l'eul IO 3S ~ M .. H9ll\llle 64 ... St.Louie 4t M New Oo'liMne .. .. 11 ....... T~ 7' ta NMt'l'Ofll 57 50 WLlll• 7t 17 NorlOlll 72 51 SenMtoNo 7t 41 NOr1ll "'91 .. 63 2t Sen Olego 15 ., Olr.,_o.., S2 43 hf\ f"rWICllloo 61 47 OmeN 12 ,. 8191eM.-a M Or'-'O 74 52 ...... 67 • Pllm!lpnnQt 102 71 Slvewpon .. .. ~ 55 40 SIOwrF ... 14 "' ~ ~01 12 990k-13 43 ~ eo ., Syr-.. It p ,Me •5 ., T°'*'I 15 ,.. Por118ncl Of• 61 31 T-t5 12 Pr~ 49 ., TulN ee 45 =rOlty 17 411 WMNnolon .. .. .. 31 Wldllt1 64 SJ 1111~. Pet1ly dOudy 1odey , Howton 13 43 tonlgttl Md WWdneldey UCIPI -ll1dlllnllpole 52 3t """1 ""' "'°"""8 low doudt Jeckeon,...._ 63 45 Jeclt_ ..... 10 •9 ~ 44 37 Eztended ~City 12 34 LUVegM .. ee UIUe Aoc:tt ... •7 Cloudy end COOi fllut.oey w«JI • lOI~ ... 63 ll!Qnl ~of.,_. Fl# withe l~ 49 43 -"""9 trend Frio.y end S.1urdey luCltlOCI< 71 40 HIQh9 In Ille mlCI IOI Ind 70. l OM lrt MempNe ~ .. the UC>I* 40l lfld 60e Mternl a.> ~ Temperatures Tides .. ~ Albany 53 48 ~que 73 43 TOOAY ~ 33 Seoondlow 3:41p.m. 1 2 Anc:hO<IQI 37 " ~NG" 10;03.f'"' 90 ~ 54 39 ft0.90A At111n11 58 45 FlrWI IOw 5:05 e.m. -0. Atlllllle Clly 61 48 =:.riow 11.31 am 3.7 Auel In 78 •9 4:24p.m ' 7 Blltltnor• 63 41 Second lligll 10·40p.m 5.1 am COMDmOll 1-3 '"' ~ 78 46 59 47 Sun Mtl today et 8:2$ p.m .. - ei-u 81 30 Wedneedeyel5:19a.m lnd .... 119eln 8olM 7t 49 11 l ::HI p.m. lloeton 47 '4 Moon -today •t 8:51 p.m. ..... ~ 12 61 w.dl~ .. 6:4 11.m. Ind Mte lgllf'I .,..., .. 3e .. 10:0ep.m. • 1-3 poor 1-3 poor 1-3 poor 1·3 poor 1·2 poor 1-3 ,.., Swll dit'ectlon: ~ NB 'Don Juan' pleads innocent, posts bail By STEVE MARBLE 01 .... 0., .......... A wealthy NewP.On Beach man has pleaded not gwlty to charges of sexually assaulting eight women, some of whom were allegedly lured to his home by newspa~r ads and promises of exotic gifts and va- cations. Paul William Jensen. 40, appeared Monday in Harbor Municipal Coun. where he was taken into custody. He later was freed after posting $150,000 bail. A preliminary heanng to de- termine if Jensen should stand tnal on 16 felony counts, iocludmg rape. kidnap and rape by object, was set for May2. Jensen allegedly attacked the women after luring them to his Coun Street residence near the Ncwpon Pier through newspaper ads and after meeting them at local nightspots. A former computer salesman at Microdata Corp .. Jensen has de· scribed the charges against him as ·'bizarre ... He could not be reached today for further comment. South Laguna tenants sue mobile home park owners Jensen was initially arrested and released on $50.000 bail early this month in connection with allqed assaults on three women, according to Deputy District Attorney Rick King. But afier newspaper aniclcs detail· 1ng the alleged rapes. five more women came forward with new allegauons. Sgt. Paul Hemscy said. Heniscy said police have been contacted by as many as 18 women who claim they• were attacked by Jensen . The p0lice detective said some of the women were unwilling to press charges. Other cases were so old th at the statute of limitations precluded criminal charges from being filed. he said. By JEFF ADLER OftheDellJl"llelllllft The m1ll1on-dollar lawsuit filed by the tenants of the Treasure Island Mobile Home Park 1n South Laguna against the park''i owners went to court Monday. The Treasure Island Tenants As- sociation sued park owners claiming they had engaged in a "pattern of harassment and intimidation" and had illegally retaliated against park residents. many of whom arc elderly, after two earlier lawsuits challenging the conversion of the park to a Lime-share reson were filed. The lawsuit. which is being tned in two phases in Judge John Flynn Jr.'s Santa Ana counroom. asks that park ' . ' \' - • __...I , ....... , • 1 owners not only be ordered to reimburse residents for approximate· ly $500,000 they were charged in excessive rents. but also that the owners be assessed $500.000 in punitive damages. A Judge will rule on the legal men ts of one part of the case while a Jury will hear and decide the second part, according to Ellen Winterbottom. the Irvine attorney representing the ten- ants' association. Winterbottom said she expects to call about 18 witnesses during the course of the es timated week-long trial. The lawsuit 1s the third of three legal actions challenging park owners and thctr nght to convert the mobile home park to a time-share reson. Easter egg hunt Candy and prizes will be provided during the annual Easter Eu Hunt scheduled Saturday at the rountain Valley Recreation Center. 16400 Brookhurst St. ·The hunt, co-sponsored by the Fountain Valley Jaycees. is open to children up to 9 years old. For more information. call 839-8611 . Alrporte( Im Hotel 18700 MacArthur Blvd. Across from John W111i1nt AtrP<lrl IRVINE R~rv.1t1on~ ( 714 J 833-2770 • t ( I